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Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System Gregory S. Jenkins, Amadou Gaye, Bamba Sylla LPASF AF20

Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

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Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System. Gregory S. Jenkins, Amadou Gaye, Bamba Sylla LPASF AF20. Rational for Regional models. Why use regional climate models for West Africa. Orography (Guinea highlands, Jos Plateau) Lakes (Lake Chad) Coastline - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African

Climate SystemGregory S. Jenkins, Amadou Gaye,

Bamba Sylla

LPASF AF20

Page 2: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Rational for Regional models

• Why use regional climate models for West Africa.– Orography (Guinea highlands, Jos Plateau)

– Lakes (Lake Chad)

– Coastline

– Important physical and meteorological Gradients (vegetation, precipitation, temperature).

– Mesoscale forcing for precipitation (easterly waves, squall lines, mesoscale convective complexes, non squall clusters).

Page 3: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Regional Climate Modeling Approach

1. Drive regional climate model with observations at lateral boundaries.

– Identify biases in regional climate model using present-day observations.

2. Drive regional climate model GCM data for present-day (1980-1984) at lateral boundaries.

– Identify and Compare biases to regional climate model driven by observations.

3. Drive regional climate model with GCM data for 2090-2094.

– Compare regional climate model changes to GCM 21st and 20th century result

Page 4: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Errors associated with regional climate models

• Parameterizations - convection, land-atmosphere, clouds)

• Biases (cold, warm, wet, dry)• Internal model variability (Eg. Does the model

represent easterly waves correctly).• Lateral Boundary conditions (GCM errors)• Climate sensitivity of regional climate model

( how much warming for 1 W/m2 of GHG forcing).

Page 5: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Questions associated with regional climate models

• Can we quantify the individual and collective errors in regional model simulations?

• Can we quantify the error associated with lateral boundary conditions?

• Can we address the added value associated with regional climate models?

Page 6: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Convection Parameterizations

Page 7: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Biases in Zonal winds from convective parameterization

Page 8: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Current Status

• 60 km Regional Climate model simulation for West Africa (25W-25E, 3N-27N).

• Driven at lateral boundaries by NCEP reanalysis.

• Phase I 1993-2002 (Done)

• Phase II. 1982-1993 (Running)

• Phase III. 1972-1982 (April, 2004)

Page 9: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Capacity Building and Regional climate Modeling

• 21 year simulation- download 54 Gigabytes from US.

• 1 Gigabyte download (6-18 hours).• 10 year RegCM simulation uses approximately 50

Gigabytes. • Need to invest infrastructures in Africa for long-

term research. Costs are not prohibitive currently. • Internet getting better.

Page 10: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

RegCM/Observations comparison for Temperature

Page 11: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

RegCM/Observation comparison for Temperature

Page 12: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Annual cycle of Temperature (Observed and RegCM)-1993-2000

R = 0.88R = 0.92

Page 13: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

RegCM/Observation comparison for Precipitation (1993-2000)

Page 14: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

RegCM/Observation comparison for Precipitation (1993-2000)

Page 15: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Annual cycle of Precipitation (Observed and RegCM)-1993-2000

R=0.976 R=0.956

Page 16: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

NCEP/RegCM 700 hpa/200 hPa wind comparison

Page 17: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Dry(1997)/Wet (1999) Year comparison

Page 18: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Dry(2002)/Wet (1999) Year comparison

Page 19: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

RegCM Spectral Signature of Easterly waves (V component)

Page 20: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

RegCM Spectral Signature of Easterly waves (U component)

Page 21: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Preliminary Summary

• RegCM does a good job in simulating West African Climate– Precipitation (annual cycle captured) – Temperature (annual cycle captured but cold

bias in Guinea)– AEJ, TEJ captured– African Easterly waves (3-5 day and 6-9 day

AEWs captured).

Page 22: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

RegCM data

• Saved every 6 hours surface fields, 12 hours meteorological fields.

• Available at diurnal, monthly timescales.

• Temperature (max, min, mean)

• Precipitation, evaporation, soil moisture, atmospheric moisture,

• Radiation - shortwave, longwave ,net, cloud fractions

• Dynamic field (u,v, SLP, geo-potential heights)

Page 23: Regional Climate Modeling Simulations of the West African Climate System

Plans

• Finish RegCM/NCEP simulations.

• Begin driving RegCM with CSM data.