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Atlantic Hurricanes and Climate Change: Modeling Studies
Hurricane Katrina, Aug. 2005
GFDL model simulation of Atlantic hurricane activity
Tom Knutson
Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Lab/NOAAPrinceton, New Jersey
http://www.gfdl.noaa.gov/~tk
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Collaborators:
Joe SirutisIsaac HeldGabe VecchiBob TuleyaMorris BenderSteve GarnerMing ZhaoS.-J. Lin
Source:Vecchi et al. Science (2008)
Projection 1: Absolute SST
• ~300% projected increase in Power Dissipation
• Indirect attribution: CO2 SST Hurricanes
Projection 2: Relative SST
• Projected change: sign uncertain, +/- 80%
• No Attribution
Statistical projections of 21st century Atlantic hurricane activity have a large dependence on the predictor used.
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Zetac Regional Model reproduces the interannual variability and trend of Atlantic hurricane counts (1980-2006)
18-km grid model nudged toward large-scale (wave 0-2) NCEP Reanalyses
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Source: Knutson et al., 2007, Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc.
Projected Atlantic region climate changes: 18-Model CMIP3 ensemble
Higher shear
Higher potential intensity
1) Decreased frequency of tropical storms (-27%) and hurricanes (-18%).
3) Caveat: this model does not simulate hurricanes as strong as those observed.
The model provides projections of Atlantic hurricane and tropical storm frequency changes for late 21st century, downscaled from a multi-model ensemble climate change (IPCC A1B scenario):
Storm Intensities (Normalized by frequency)
4) A more consistent intensity increase is apparent after adjusting for decreased frequency
2) Increased frequency and intensity of the strongest hurricanes(5 12)
Source: Knutson et al., 2008, Nature Geoscience.
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Zetac Model Downscaling:
• 9 individual CMIP3 models now completed
• (plus the 18-model ensemble mean)
• A consistent decrease in tropical storms becomes a mixture of decreases and increases for major (Cat 3) hurricanes (in terms of central pressure)
Provisional Results: Do not quote or cite.
Tropical Cyclones Frequency Projections (Late 21st century) - Summary
Blue = decrease
Red = increase
Source: Knutson et al. 2010
The new model simulates increased hurricane rainfall rates in the warmer climate (late 21st century, A1B scenario) …consistent with previous studies…
Present Climate Warm Climate
Warm Climate – Present Climate
Rainfall Rates (mm/day)
Avg. Rainfall Rate Increases: 50 km radius: +37%100 km radius: +23%150 km radius: +17%400 km radius: +10%
Average Warming: 1.72oC
Source: Knutson et al., 2008, Nature Geoscience.
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A further downscaling step to 9-km triply nested GFDL hurricane modelMorris Bender, et al., Science, Feb. 2010.
18km grid Zetac regional climate model
9 km GFDL hurricane model
observed
Simulated distributions of maximum wind speeds(Atlantic tropical storms and hurricanes, 1980-2006)
Down-scaled GFDL hurricane prediction model produced much more realistic distribution of maximum wind speeds compared to Zetac.
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20 30 40 50 60 70 80Maximum Wind Speed (m/s)
No
rmalized
occu
rrences
Source: Bender, et al., Science, 2010.
Distributions (CDF’s) of Atlantic tropical cyclone intensities (1980-2006).
Red: 1980-1994 (inactive)Blue: 1995-2006 (active)
Fraction of storms above indicated intensity
Fraction of storms above indicated intensity
Source: Bender et al., Science, 2010.
GFDL Hurricane Model intensity distribution is also shifted to higher intensities in active years, but the difference is smaller than observed.
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Active era
Inactive era
Active era
Inactive era
Maximum Wind Speed (m/s)
Observed intensities
Simulated intensities
12 In a warmer climate (late 21st century A1B scenario) the hurricane model simulates an expanded distribution of Atlantic hurricane intensities.
The strongest hurricanes increase in number for the downscaled ensemble-mean climate warming…
…and increase for 3 of 4 individual climate models tested.
Control
Source: Bender et al., Science, 2010.
Late 21st Century Climate Warming Projection-- Average of 18 CMIP3 Models
(27 Simulated Hurricane Seasons) Source: Bender et al., Science, 2010
Control Climate (Odd Years Only)
GFDL-CM2.1
MRI-CGCM
MPI-ECHAM5
UKMO-HADCM3
Degrees Longitude East
Deg
rees Latitu
de
NWS VERSION (GFDL)
Tracks of Storms that Reached Category 4 or 5 Intensity
Degrees Longitude East Degrees Longitude East
Deg
rees Latitu
de
Late 21st Century Warmed Climate Projection based on 4 Individual CMIP3 Climate Models
SUMMARY OF PROJECTED CHANGE
• Colored bars show changes for the18 model CMIP3 ensemble (27 seasons); dots show range of changes across 4 individual CMIP models (13 seasons).
Cat 4+5 frequency: 81% increase, or 10% per decade
Source: Bender et al., Science, 2010.
Estimated net impact of these changes on damage potential:
+28%
Emergence Time Scale: If the observed Cat 4+5 data since 1944 represents the noise (e.g. through bootstrap resampling), how long would it take for a trend of ~10% per decade in Cat 4+5 frequency to emerge from noise? Answer: ~60 yr (by then 95% of cases are positive)
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Source: Bender et al., Science, 2010.
Instead, assume residuals from a 4th order polynomial: 55 yr
Instead, resample chunks of length 3-7 yr: 65-70 yr
GFDL HIRAM 50km grid global model: Simulated vs Observed Tropical Storm Tracks (1981-2005)
Source: Zhao et al. J. Climate (2009)
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HIRAM 50 km grid model TC correlations
for several basins
North Atlantic
East Pacific
West Pacific
red: observationsblue: HiRAM ensemble meanshading: model uncertainty
corr=0.83
corr=0.62
corr=0.52
Hurricane counts for each basinare normalized by atime-independent multiplicative factor
Correlation for the SouthPacific is ~0.3 and insignificantfor the Indian Ocean
Source: Zhao, Held, Lin, and Vecchi (J. Climate, 2009)
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Projected Changes in Regional Hurricane Activity
GFDL 50-km HIRAM, using four projections of late 21st Century SSTs.
Red/yellow = increaseBlue/green = decrease
• Regional increases/decreases much larger than global-mean.
• Pattern depends on details of SST change.
Source: Zhao, Held, Lin and Vecchi (J. Climate, 2009)
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Unit: Number per year
18-model CMIP3 Ensemble GFDL CM2.1
HadCM3 ECHAM5
Global Model Tropical Cyclone Climate Change Experiments: Use A1B Scenario late 21st century projected
SST changes from several CMIP3 models
GFDL CM2.1 HadCM3
ECHAM5 CMIP3 18-model Ensemble
Source: Zhao, Held, Lin, and Vecchi (J. Climate, in press)
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Unit: Deg C
Conclusions:
i) GFDL model late 21st century (ensemble) projections suggest a decrease in the number of hurricanes in the Atlantic (-24% to -32%), but nearly a doubling in the frequency of very intense (Cat 4-5) hurricanes by 2100. Preciptation rates in hurricanes are also projected to increase (~20% within 100km of storm center).
ii) Based on present understanding, we would not expect a 10%/decade increase in Cat 4-5 frequency, if it occurred, to be detectable for a number of decades.
iii) Not all individual climate models (when downscaled) produce an increase in Cat 4-5 frequency as was simulated for the 18-model ensemble climate change signal.
iv) Remaining caveats include model limitations for the projected SST patterns (e.g., clouds; indirect aerosols); limitations of intense hurricane simulations; and observed data concerns (i.e., cat 4-5 record).
v) Future work: expanding TC downscaling work to other basins; statistical approaches to downscaling are also being pursued (Villarini/Smith et al.; Held and Zhao)
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