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Transcript of Climate Change and its Effect on Safety and Infrastructure Dr David Jones Head of Climate Analysis &...
![Page 1: Climate Change and its Effect on Safety and Infrastructure Dr David Jones Head of Climate Analysis & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO,](https://reader036.fdocuments.in/reader036/viewer/2022081401/56649ee65503460f94bf66a3/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Climate Change and its Effect on Safety and Infrastructure
Dr David JonesHead of Climate Analysis & Prediction
Bureau of Meteorology
Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE CRC, Dep Climate Change
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Overview
• Why you should care about climate change
• Recent Climate Changes (focus on Australia & last 50 years):
• Human climate drivers - CO2 (the main GHG)• Temperature• Rainfall • Sea level
• Looking to the future of climate changeMost of the observed increase in globally averaged
temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic
greenhouse gas concentrations (IPCC 2007)
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Atmospheric CO2 and Temperature
400,000 years of data
Greenland ~3M yearsAntarctica ~13M years
~390 ppm (or 450 e-ppm)
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The Human Drivers of Climate Change
Methane stabilising, NOx continuing to rise
CO2 rising rapidly
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• Direct effects of climate change on individual extreme events: e.g., storms & heatwaves
• Indirect (background) effects: e.g., sea level rise exacerbating floods, higher temperatures leading to drying of forest fuels, lower fuel loads (due to winter drying)
• Effects on resilience & preparedness: e.g.,– Rural depopulation due to drought less fire fighting
volunteers?– Uncertain return period for events (leading to over/under
investment in preparedness)– Non-availability of insurance or insurance too expensive– Uncertainty delaying or stopping investment decisions– Long-term drought (or perceptions of fire risk) damaging
rural economies
Climate Change Impacts – Extremes, Safety and Infrastructure
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Australian Temperatures
Temperature has increased by about 0.7 C since 19602005 was Australia’s warmest year on record, 2009 the second warmest
Annual and Decadal Mean Temperature Anomalies For Australia
-1.25
-1.00
-0.75
-0.50
-0.25
0.00
0.25
0.50
0.75
1.00
1.25
1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010
Year
Tem
per
atu
re A
no
mal
ies
(°C
) Decadal mean
Departures from 1961-90 normal
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Changes in Maximum Temperature Extremes
Highest maximum temperatures tend to occur in recent years, with the largest number on record in 2009
Distribution of High Maximum Temperatures
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
1960 1970 1980 1990 2000Year
Nu
mb
er
in E
ac
h Y
ea
r Decadal mean
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Melbourne: Mortality versus Maximum Temperature
Black Saturday (46.4°C)
Nicholls (2010)
Vic Gov (Aged Care, 2010)
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Australian Rainfall
Increase in many parts of northern and central areas and decrease in the south and east
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13 Years of Australian Rainfall
Recurring pattern of drought in the southwest and southeast and floods in the north and centre
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Victoria: Seasonal Fire Danger
Melbourne Airport 2008/09 – second worst fire season on record. The big story is the drought.
Start of the long dry
13 year drought
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Perth Dam Streamflows
From: http://www.watercorporation.com.au/D/dams_streamflow.cfm
Collapse of streamflow as a result of warming and drying
338GL
177GL 82GL
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Change in Sea Level
Approximately 20cm since 1870, with a steepening riseFollows very closely global temperatures – a result of thermal expansion and melting of ice
-100
-50
0
50
100
150
1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000 2020Year
Glo
ba
l M
ea
n S
ea
Le
ve
l (m
m)
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Change in Australian Sea Level
Since the early 1990s, sea level rise has been 1 to 3 cm/decade in the south and east and 7 to 10 cm/decade in the north and west
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Infrastructure and Safety
Mandurah, WA
Waratah Bay, Vic
Gold Coast, QLD
~3mSome 711,000 addresses are within 3 km of the coast and within 6m of sea level (Engineers Australia)
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Impact in the Coastal Zone
Increase in the frequency of high sea level events for a 0.5M sea level rise (ACE CRC 2008)
~3m
Managing our Coastal Zone in a Changing Climate (2009)If sea-levels rose by 0.9 metres, 4700 residential lots along the Lake Macquarie waterway foreshore would be inundated.
With almost 250,000 vulnerable coastal buildings, Queensland is at the highest risk from all Australian states...
In Vic, more than 80,000 coastal buildings and infrastructure are at risk from the projected sea level rise, coastal flooding and erosion.
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Projections for Australia in 2030 (CSIRO & BoM)
Warmer by 0.4 to 2.0°C 10-50% increase in days over 35°C 10-80% decrease in days below 0°C Up to 10% less annual rainfall in SE Australia Up to 20% less annual rainfall in SW Australia Up to 10% more summer rainfall on east coast Up to 10% more autumn rainfall inland Heavier rainfall where average rainfall increases or decreases slightly Increase in intensity of tropical cyclones
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The Future Rapid Warming Expected
+1.7ºC
600ppm
+2.7ºC
850ppm
+3.2ºC
1250ppm
Warming will be largely dictated by CO2 emissions
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Emerging Consensus on Rainfall Changes
Rainfall change for 2090-2099 relative to 1980-1999.
Drying across southern Australia (and indeed most subtropical areas).
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• In a country such as Australia where natural climate variability is large, the effects of climate change are more likely to manifest themselves as a series of threshold exceedences leading to stressful events and dislocation followed by (partial) recovery
• Climate change will manifest itself through the weather Expect surprises Expect unexpected emergencies and impacts It is not easy (perhaps possible) to link individual events to climate change until the climate change is large
How Will Changes Appear?
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In Summary
• Data from the Bureau, CSIRO and peer organisations shows a picture of pervasive and consistent trends
• The trends are continuing and will have an escalating impact across society – health, safety, infrastructure, planning…
• The quality of the data and science is high, and the base data are all available for scrutiny and independent analysis
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