Climate Attribution Flashcards

ESD

1
Q

climate change attribution -> determine whether observed changes in weather = caused by cliamte change

A

more certainty into the impact of humans -> 1995 = humans had a discernable influence -> 2021 = human activity is the dominating cause from pre-industrial times

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2
Q

modelling -> can be used when the observation record < 17 years (Trenberth, 2012)

A

attribution studies are conducted testing for causation between climate variables -> one of the greatest triumphs of the 21st century

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3
Q

early anthropogenic research -> experiments

A

1856 - Foote = warmed glass cylinders -> found co2 was most impressionable
1861 - Tyndall = analysed impacts of temperatures changeson ghgs
1896 - Arrhenius = ghgh on the earth’s surface in the form of a model
1938 - Callendar = modelled anthropogenic impacts on temperature

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4
Q

early climate models prior to the 1990s failed to represent water vapour

A

they were unstable and would get warmer as the ocean would be evaporated away

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5
Q

climate models = simplification of the processes taking place across the earth

A

they are forced and a series of outputs in the form of a simulation or projection are created

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6
Q

climate models = gridded = the information is processed across these grids at smaller scales -> often parameterisation takes place (McGuffie and Henderson-Sellers, 2014)

A

the models are then often forced with variables e.g. ghgs, aersols

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7
Q

early attribution modelling -> model was forced (pre-industrial co2 and current cos etc…) and the output was compared to an unforced model

A

equilibrium models -> had a coarse resolution and were coupled = models were inaccurate

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8
Q

Mitchell et al., 1995 -> HadCRUT (2.5x3.75 w/ 20 oceanic + 19 atmospheric layers) -> forced co2 and aerosol concentrations

A

took several years to run = forced the climate and a correlation was taken to see if it matched observation records -> aerosol component not depicted well in models as it assumed lower planetary albefo

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9
Q

in the 1990s

A

we were able to model the natural variability of the climate

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10
Q

1995 IPCC report -> low resolution modelling but had patterns which identified warming and cooling

A

transient models -> these were coupled models which had improved resolutions from the equilibrium models

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11
Q

Santer et al., 1996 -> forced, aerosols, ozone and co2 concentrations to determine vertical atmospheric changes

A

assumed it was linear = did not account for interactions between the ghgs and how these would implicate the atmosphere and forcing only run once = 1 sample size

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12
Q

hypothesis testing era -> realised that volcanic aerosols not as impactful across the midlatitudes due to the winds = more impactful across the tropics by nullifying the impacts of co2

A

ozone hole -> input into climate models and its effects on the atmosphere

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13
Q

Tett et al., 1999 -> (HadCM2) did the same as Santer but did not assume linearity between the mechanisms = forced (ghg), (ghg + sulphates), (ghg + sulphates + ozone) -> first time that natural and anthropogenic variables were split

A

tested against the observed ‘fingerprint warming’ = atmospheric warming with cooling in the stratosphere, warming in the mid-upper troposphere, which is intensified most in the tropics, and warming but at a slower rate at the surface. Tett’s forced modelling = sulphates in the forcing led to a cooler stratosphere, ozone exacerbated this cooling and better represented the radiosonde observation record -> later halved the ozone concentration and had a better representation

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14
Q

Stott et al., 2000 -> HadCM3 = different climate runs to highlight that the initial conditions were not producing the simulate climate

A

meant that human activity was the cause or that models are not proficient enough in simulations -> maybe deep sea current not being depicted

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15
Q

Tett et al., 2000 -> forced variables to please model/climate deniers with solar radiation and volcanic aerosols

A

Tett et al., 2002 -> improved early research -> determine how much warming was attributable to human activity = 0.5degrees

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16
Q

model uncertainty is determined

A

by running the model multiple times = analyse to see whether there is significant change = ensemble models produce the best results as the signal is clearer e.g. CMIP3 and 5 (McGuffie and Henderson-Sellers, 2014)

17
Q

improvements in modelling -> more data being incorporated e.g. soil moisture content in attributing the 2015 Ethiopian drought (Phillip et al., 2017)

A

increased computational power = higher resolution and more runs e.g. weather@home (Phillip et al., 2018)

18
Q

attribution of extreme events -> emerged from improvements in modelling

A

focuses on determining whether an extreme event was in line with weather patterns or was created due to climate change

19
Q

EEA -> Technique 1 (Risk-based approach) (Shepherd, 2016) -> models used to produce counterfactual simulations (weather forecasts based on lots of different initial conditions) and a factual data set (forecast based on the observed conditions)

A

statistical analysis to determine the likelihood of the extreme event = fractional attributable risk

20
Q

for extreme event attribution there needs to be a strict definition e.g. temporal and spatial boundaries

A

e.g. overflow rates for flooding or peak days of precipitation e.g. England and Wales wettest periods 2000 (Pall et al., 2011)

21
Q

extreme event attribution -> first paper -> Stott et al., 2004 = human contribution to the European heatwave of 2003

A

paper produced a grid box over c. Eur -> average temperature threshold under the current record but above the previous record
modelled the different simulations to determine that human activity did contribute
modelling inaccuracies -> some issues with land and atmospheric feedbacks e.g. vegetation dying would have exacerbated the drought through albedo induced shifts

22
Q

EEA -> Technique 2 (Storyline Approach) -> analyse the atmospheric conditions which led to the climate event -> see if these were anthropogenically driven or not -> known as partial attribution as dynamical processes not all considered

A

first used -> 2013 to analyse the 2011 Texan drought (Hoerling et al., 2013)

23
Q

climate attribution = observational record compared to forced variable shifts to determine human contribution to planetary change

A

event attribution = observations used to define the event to determine the degree of human influence in its formation

24
Q

Phillip et al., 2018 -> 3-day May floods in France 2016

A

data and models validated for the extreme event (5 climate models were used to simulate the precipitation over the River Seine and Loire from April-June in the form of analysing rates for 3 days which could then be used to determine the return period) -> return period for precipitation rates was produced (GEV distribution and multiplicative bias correction), trend produced = risk ratio (likelihood of a similar event occurring in a climate without human influence), and an attribution of the trend was conducted -> anthropogenic activity increased the precipitation rates over the River Seine 2.2x and over the River Loire 1.9x.

25
Q

Philip et al., 2018 -> criticsms

A

different paper was published 10 days after the event -> similar conclusions -> rejected since it was too soon published -> wanted a more rigorous analysis of the data.
wanted to determine the contribution of human influence to the floods -> study was criticised as it failed to incorporate topography, land-use change and ground saturation rates.

26
Q

Jones et al., 2008 -> NH summertime temperatures

A

HadGEM1 and CRUTEM3v -> analyse how anthropogenic climate change impacting NH summertime temperatures = made possible through better simulations of the NH and therefore could determine how human activity contributed to the warm periods (Jones et al., 2008).
Focus on using observed data -> simulated an All run, a ANTHRO run and a NATURAL run for the NH -> comparisons with the real-time data then compared to the models = ALL run aligned best with the observed data with multidecadal variability -> NATURAL aligned most poorly -> correlations used to determine this = ALL simulation 0.84 could explain 70% of variability.
Applied Stott’s method across 14 regions in the NH -> optima detection to analyse the role of each of the greenhouse gases on the observed and simulated temperatures.
ANTHRO = observed temperatures and therefore warmer NH summers.

27
Q

Otto et al., 2018 -> 2010 Thailand Flooding (monsoon + TS) -> 10-20th October

A

observational data in the form of precipitation is influenced too heavily by seasonal variability and spatial coverage low for the 0.5x0.5 gridded precipitation data set (1979-present) = did calculate a 2.5 year return period for the precipitation rates > pre-industrial (nonanthropogenic warming) = 4.8x increase in risk.

28
Q

models struggle to capture convection -> convective parameters have only started being used more recently e.g. 25km coarse model within the Pall et al. (2019) paper

A

overcome this by analysing the weather patterns which produce these precipitation rates e.g. low pressure – note can only really be used over the midlatitudes due to the relationship of low pressure and precipitation rates -> at the same time over the tropics MCCs are too small-scale to be detected by models (McGuffie and Henderson-Sellers, 2014).

29
Q

models struggle to depict mountains and ocean ->

A

HadCM3 model in Stott et al. (2000)’s research -> unable to simulate over the N.A. as it could not incorporate the NAO + (McGuffie and Henderson-Seller, 2014)

30
Q

improvements in the resolution quality of modelling

A

number of rows and boxes in gridding has improved e.g. 1970s models have a grid of around 500km and there were 10 vertical layers while more current research has a spatial resolution of around 100km and 50-60 layers (McGuffie and Henderson-Sellers, 2014).

31
Q

World Attribution Service

A

real-time modern-day attribution research -> apply the techniques of attribution as an event takes place to determine the impact of climate change on the real-time occurrence of the event e.g. politicisation of extreme attribution in science.

32
Q

Teleconnections -> ENSO exacerbating climatic conditions

A

La Niña 2011 -> increased atmospheric water vapour around China, Indian and Pakistan (Trenberth, 2012).