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Observations of climate change Help! Kevin E Trenberth NCAR Global Warming is unequivocal Since 1970, rise in: Global surface temperatures Tropospheric temperatures Global SSTs, ocean Ts Global sea level Water vapor Rainfall intensity Precipitation extratropics Hurricane intensity Drought Extreme high temperatures Heat waves Decrease in: NH Snow extent Arctic sea ice Glaciers Cold temperatures IPCC 2007 The climate is changing. We can and should take mitigating actions that will slow and eventually stop climate change. Meanwhile we must adapt to climate change. But adapt to what? We do not have predictions. We do not have adequate reliable observations. We do not have the needed information system! Global mean temperatures are rising faster with time Warmest 12 years: 1998,2005,2003,2002,2004,2006, 2001,1997,1995,1999,1990,2000 Period 25 50 100 150 Rate 0.1770.052 0.1280.026 0.0740.018 0.0450.012 Years /decade IPCC 2007 Heat waves are increasing: an example Extreme Heat Wave Summer 2003 Europe 30,000 deaths Trend plus variability? IPCC 2007 Surface Temperature 1901-2005 It has not warmed uniformly: More warming over land Why no warming over SE USA? Or N Atlantic IPCC 2007 Drought is increasing most places The most Mainly decrease in rain over landimportant in tropicsspatial and pattern (top) of subtropics, but enhanced theatmospheric monthly by increased Drought demand Palmer with warming Severity Index (PDSI) for 1900 to 2002. The time series (below) accounts for most of the trend in PDSI. IPCC 2007 Extremes of temperature are changing! Observed trends (days) per decade for 1951 to 2003: 5th or 95th percentiles From Alexander et al. (2006) IPCC 2007 Increases in rainfall and cloud counter warming Drought Trend in Warm Days 1951-2003 Absence of warming by day coincides with wetter and cloudier conditions IPCC 2007 Regional climate change Hypothesis: It is impossible to address regional climate change without fully addressing how patterns of climate variability (modes) change, and thus how: ENSO: El Niño Southern Oscillation NAO/NAM: North Atlantic Oscillation/Northern Annular Mode SAM: Southern Annular Mode PDO: Pacific Decadal Oscillation AMO: Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation change! El Niño - Southern Oscillation Cooler SLP Surface temperature Wetter IPCC 2007 Precipitation Pacific Decadal Oscillation SST pattern (above) and time series (lower right) of 1st EOF of N Pacific SSTs. NPI index of Aleutian Low Indian Ocean SST (tropics) 1976/77 climate shift IPCC 2007 Many observed climate anomalies can be simulated in models with specified SSTs • Sahel drought: Hurrell et al 2004, Giannini et al 2003, Hoerling, • US Dust Bowl: Schubert et al. 2004, Seager et al. 2005 • Drought (US, Europe, Asia): Hoerling and Kumar 2003 But we can not (yet) simulate the observed SSTs. Global increases in SST are not uniform. Why? Coupling with atmosphere Tropical Indian Ocean has warmed to be competitive as warmest part of global ocean. Tropical Pacific gets relief owing to ENSO? Deeper mixing in Atlantic, THC. This pattern is NOT well simulated by coupled models! Relates to ocean uptake of heat, heat content & transport. IPCC 2007 IPCC experience on observations Sorting out the climate signal from the noise in inadequate observations from a changing observing system is an ongoing continual challenge Space-based observations are a particular challenge Temperatures Issues: 1. Missing data and treatment 2. Quality control 3. Max and Min T much more sensitive to inhomogeneities 4. Urban heat island 5. Need to continue to pressure countries to provide high frequency data (hourly and daily) IPCC 2007 Annual anomalies of maximum and minimum temperatures and diurnal temperature range (DTR) (°C) averaged for the 71% of global land areas for 1950 to 2004. DTR 1979-2004 Precipitation: not a continuous variable IPCC 2007 Large differences in amounts. Inability to analyze characteristics: intensity, frequency, duration, type, as well as amount. Need hourly data! Tropical rainfall 30N-30S Land Total Issues: Need much more complete and better data on all hydrological variables set in a holistic framework: Precipitation: hourly (intensity, Ocean frequency, duration, type, amount); streamflow, runoff, Land: systematic offset 3% evaporation, drought indices, Ocean: no relationship soil moisture (incl ice), snow Total: dominated by ocean cover depth… North Atlantic hurricanes have increased with SSTs N. Atlantic hurricane record best after 1944 Marked increase with aircraft after 1994 surveillance. (1944-2005) SST Global number and percentage of intense hurricanes is increasing Some issues: Partial reprocessing of ISCCP data has occurred for tropical storms (Kossin) Records are far from homogeneous, even for satellite era Records/practices are not comparable in different regions, even now. We desperately need an internationally coordinated reprocessing of all satellite data for hurricanes, to get many parameters of interest, such as size, intensity, rainfall, integrated variables (0-100 km; 0-400 km) etc. Ivan 2004 Main Issues • The in situ data are not global and have problems • Satellites drift in orbit and instruments degrade: the data generally do not provide a climate record. They could. • The satellite record is in jeopardy, especially from demanifesting several climate instruments from NPOESS. • A baseline transfer standard is essential: in situ super sites (reference radiosonde plus network). • Regional climate requires attention to modes of variability and model initialization Why do we need an integrated Earth System Analysis? • We have a lot of observations: from satellites and other remote sensing. • The volumes are huge • We use but a small fraction • Most are not climate quality • Inconsistencies exist across variables • They do not make a climate observing system • Reprocessing and reanalysis must be part of system Goal: Climate Data Records 1. There is a need to better come to grips with the continually changing observing system. 2. There is no baseline network to anchor the analyses or space observations. The radiosonde network is not it! 3. The challenge is to improve continuity and be able to relate a current set of observations to those taken 20 years ago (or in the future). 4. There is a need for more attention to data synthesis, reprocessing, analysis and re-analysis of existing data sets; and 5. There must be a baseline set of measurements: Sparse network (30-40) of “reference sondes” for satellite calibration and climate monitoring, UT water vapor; co-located with regular sonde sites to replace them at appropriate times; integrated with ozone sondes and/or GAW and BSRN = GRUAN? GPS Radio Occultation. The challenge is to better determine: 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) how the climate system is changing how the forcings are changing how these relate to each other (incl. feedbacks) attribution of anomalies to causes what they mean for the immediate and more distant future (assessment) 6) Validate and improve models 7) seamless predictions on multiple time scales 8) how to use this information for informed planning and decision making 9) how to manage the data and reanalyze it routinely 10) how to disseminate products around the world 11) how to interact with users and stakeholders and add regional value From Trenberth et al 2002