Estimating present climate in a warming world: a model-based approach

Jouni Räisänen, Leena Ruokolainen

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

    Abstract

    "Weather services base their operational definitions of ""present"" climate on past observations, using a 30-year normal period such as 1961-1990 or 1971-2000. In a world with ongoing global warming, however, past data give a biased estimate of the actual present-day climate. Here we propose to correct this bias with a ""delta change"" method, in which model-simulated climate changes and observed global mean temperature changes are used to extrapolate past observations forward in time, to make them representative of present or future climate conditions. In a hindcast test for the years 1991-2002, the method works well for temperature, with a clear improvement in verification statistics compared to the case in which the hindcast is formed directly from the observations for 1961-1990. However, no improvement is found for precipitation, for which the signal-to-noise ratio between expected anthropogenic changes and interannual variability is much lower than for temperature. An application of the method to the present (around the year 2007) climate suggests that, as a geographical average over land areas excluding Antarctica, 8-9 months per year and 8-9 years per decade can be expected to be warmer than the median for 1971-2000. Along with the overall warming, a substantial increase in the frequency of warm extremes at the expense of cold extremes of monthly-to-annual temperature is expected."
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalClimate dynamics : observational, theoretical and computational research on the climate system
    Volume31
    Pages (from-to)573-585
    Number of pages13
    ISSN0930-7575
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2008
    MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

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