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Page 1: Climate Change : The State of Knowledge

Climate Change : The State of Knowledge

Bryson Bates

Leader, Pathways to Adaptation Theme

22 April 2009

Climate Adaptation National Research Flagship

Page 2: Climate Change : The State of Knowledge

Presentation outline

● Human vs geological time scales

● Observed global trends

● Observed national trends

● Climate change projections for WA

● Extremes

● Concluding remarks

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Drivers of climate change

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Climate has always changed

New

Scientist, 2008

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Geologic & human time scales

Past super-greenhouse conditions: 50 My BP CO2~ 1,000 ppm; no polar ice; sea level ~ 120 m

above present

250 My BP CO2~ 10 to 20 x present level (~ 385 ppm); 50 to 95% extinction rate

Advent of humans ~ 2.2 to 2.4 My BP Civilisation started ~ 12 Ky BP Current rate CO2 increase 200 x faster than that over last

650 Ky Without mitigation & abatement, burning all known coal

reserves will raise atmospheric CO2 ~ 2,000 ppm

Estimated arrival time for next ice age: ‘now’ to 20 Ky

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Enhanced greenhouse effect

GHGs are a natural part of the atmosphere: support life

Water vapour is most abundant GHG: humans have little impact

Humans have most impact on CO2, CH4, N2O: net effect

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Global fossil fuel emissions

SRES (2000) growth rates in % y -1 for 2000-2010:

A1B: 2.42 A1FI: 2.71A1T: 1.63A2: 2.13B1: 1.79B2: 1.61

Observed 2000-2006 3.3%

Recent emissions

1990 1995 2000 2005 2010

CO

2 E

mis

sion

s (G

tC y

-1)

5

6

7

8

9

10Actual emissions: CDIACActual emissions: EIA450ppm stabilisation650ppm stabilisationA1FI A1B A1T A2 B1 B2

1850 1900 1950 2000 2050 2100C

O2 E

mis

sion

s (G

tC y

-1)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30Actual emissions: CDIAC450ppm stabilisation650ppm stabilisationA1FI A1B A1T A2 B1 B2

20062005

2007

Global Carbon Budget update; Raupach et al. 2007, PNAS

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Observations vs IPCC projections

Rahmstorf et al. (2007)

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Rahmstorf et al. (2007)

Observations vs IPCC projections

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Global average temperatures are rising

CR

U, U

EA

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Global average temperatures are rising

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Global average temperatures are rising

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Lags in the response of climate to emissions

IPCC 2001, SYM, Figure 8.3

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Past 12 years have been unusual

CSIRO Climate change: the latest science

Very wet in the north & west

Very dry over southeast Qld, southern NSW and SA, Victoria, eastern Tas and southwest WA

Feb 1997 – Jan 2009

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Minimum & maximum temperatures

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Temperature projections (2050)

Winter Summer

B1 B1A1B A1BA1F1 A1FI

23 GCMs; 1980–1999 baselineSource: http://www.climatechangeinaustralia.gov.au/

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Wind speed projections (2050)

Winter Summer

B1 B1A1B A1BA1F1 A1FI

23 GCMs; 1980–1999 baselineSource: http://www.climatechangeinaustralia.gov.au/

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Rainfall projections (2050)

Winter Summer

B1 B1A1B A1BA1F1 A1FI

23 GCMs; 1980–1999 baselineSource: http://www.climatechangeinaustralia.gov.au/

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Specific projections

● SW rainfall projected to decrease by 2 to 20% by 2030 & 5 to 60% by 2070

● SW summer temperatures projected to increase between 0.5 to 2.1 ºC by 2030 & 1 to 6.5 ºC by 2070

● Average annual number of days above 35 ºC in Perth to increase from 28 to 36-67 by 2070

● SW winter temperatures projected to increase between 0.5 & 2 ºC by 2030 & 1 & 5.5 ºC by 2070

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Potential impacts of climate change

Greater risks to major infrastructure due to increases in extreme weather eventsMore damage to buildings; transport, energy & water services; telecommunications

More heat-related deaths for people aged over 65 1115 deaths per year at present in the 5 largest capital cities, increasing to 2300-2500 per year by 2020

Greater risks for coastal flooding from sea-level rise and storm surges(global sea level rise of 1 metre or more possible by 2100)

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Key points on weather & climate extremes

● Infrequent events at either the low or high end of a variable of interest – low probability, high impact

● Small change in average of a variable can be accompanied by large changes in I-F-D characteristics

● Wide range possible within unchanging climate – difficult to attribute individual event to climate change

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Climate change & extremes

0 2 4 6 8

0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

Climate variable

Fre

quen

cy

How will changes in

extremes be manifested?

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Rainfall extremes

● Occur on different scales in space-time● intermittent processes

● poor observations

● Not 'resolved' by computational grids in GCMs – need 'downscaling' methods

● topographic effects

● coastal effects

● subgrid-scale processes (e.g. convection)

● Changes do not scale with specific humidity changes: more complex

● Statistics vary over a range of time scales (temporal clustering)

● Changes in rainfall means cannot be used to reliably infer changes in extremes

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Value added by dynamical downscaling

200 km 65 km 4 km

2030

2070

fraction

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Concluding remarks

Our climate will continue to change due to natural & human-induced forcing

Present evidence for climate change is compelling

Prognosis for WA is hotter, & drier for SW (NW uncertain)

Climate/weather extremes – difficult topic & an active area of research

Believe/disbelieve – stay informed & manage the risk

Future management strategies will need to be:

adaptive rather than static based on a scenario & portfolio approach