1 / 15

International C20C Project: History and Overview

International C20C Project: History and Overview. J. Kinter, C. Folland and F. Molteni Third International C20C Workshop 19 April 2004  ICTP - Trieste, Italy. Background.

woodwardj
Download Presentation

International C20C Project: History and Overview

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. International C20C Project: History and Overview J. Kinter, C. Folland and F. Molteni Third International C20C Workshop 19 April 2004 ICTP - Trieste, Italy

  2. Background • Purpose: Characterize variability and predictability of climatic conditions and events of the past ~130 years associated with various slowly varying forcing functions • Initially focused on AGCMs forced with HadISST sea surface temperature and sea ice analysis

  3. Example: Excerpt from Schubert et al. 2004 (Science, 19Mar2004)

  4. Background (continued) • Period of interest: 1871-current • Organization: • Jointly organized by Hadley Centre, UK & Center for Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies (COLA), USA • 15 different modeling groups participating internationally • CLIVAR project & reporting to WMO/CAS/WGNE • Now includes many other forcing data sets, including greenhouse gases, ozone, volcanic aerosols and solar variability • Being expanded to include use of coupled models in order to more accurately simulate modes of variability that are inherently coupled

  5. Current Participating Groups • Bureau of Meteorology, Australia (www.bom.gov.au) • China Meteorological Agency, China (www.cma.gov.cn) • Center for Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies, USA (www.iges.org) • Centro de Previsão de Tempo e Estudos Climáticos, Brazil (www.cptec.inpe.br) • Department of Natural Resources, Mines & Energy, Queensland, Australia (www.nrm.qld.gov.au) • NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, USA (gmao.gsfc.nasa.gov) • Hadley Centre, Met Office, UK (www.metoffice.com/research/hadleycentre) • International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Italy (www.ictp.trieste.it) • MeteoFrance, France (www.meteo.fr) • Main Geophysical Observatory, Russia (www.mgo.rssi.ru) • Meteorological Research Institute, Japan (www.mri-jma.go.jp) • National Institute for Environmental Studies, Japan (www.nies.go.jp) • National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, New Zealand (www.niwa.cri.nz) • Seoul National University, Korea (www.snu.ac.kr:) • University of California at Los Angeles, USA (www.ucla.edu)

  6. Chronology • Project initiated by Hadley Centre • several informal bilateral collaborations established • 1st workshop held at Hadley Centre in Nov 1994 • Input to 1995 IPCC assessment and special session at 1st international AMIP conference in 1995 • Revitalized by Hadley Centre and COLA • 1998 invitation to several modeling groups • infrastructure provided by COLA (www.iges.org/c20c; GDS) • 2nd workshop held at COLA in Jan 2002 (reported in CLIVAR Exchanges, Jun 2002) • Agreed set of runs with updated forcing data sets, diagnostics and special projects • C20C established as official CLIVAR project in 2003 • Third Workshop - 19-23 Apr 2004, ICTP, Italy

  7. Contributions C20C contributes to: • Seasonal to interannual predictability • Decadal to interdecadal variability & predictability • Simulations of climate trends • Model evaluation

  8. Special Topics • Predictability of seasonal to decadal phenomena • 1930s drought in USA (“Dust Bowl”) • 1962-63 European winter • Autumn 2000 western European floods • 2003 European heat wave • Decadal modulation of response to ENSO in Australia, Indian monsoon • Time series and trends • SOI, NAO, PNA, Asian monsoon rainfall, Sahel rainfall, Nordeste Brazil rainfall, MJO trends • Global and regional land surface air temperature trends • Others, e.g., river runoff trends

  9. Validating Data Sets • NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis (1948-2003) • ERA40 Reanalysis (1958-2002) • HadSLP global sea level pressure analysis (1871-2002) • Jones land surface air temperature and Hulme land surface rainfall analyses (1871-2002) • Xie-Arkin global precipitation analysis (1979-2003)

  10. Diagnostics • Monthly means, all ensemble members • Geopotential height at 500 and 200 hPa • Mean sea level pressure • Precipitation and evaporation • Temperature at 2m and 850 hPa • Zonal and meridional winds at 850 and 200 hPa • Total heat flux and wind stress • Soil moisture index • Zonal mean cross-sections of U, V, T and q • Basic statistics • Seasonal means and standard deviations • Estimates of forced variability (ANOVA) • Linear regression trends 1950-1999 (or 1952-2001) • Regression with NINO3.4 • Special diagnostic projects • {Refer to Second C20C Workshop, Working Group 2 Report}

  11. Links to CLIVAR • C20C became a CLIVAR activity in 2003 • Also reports to Working Group on Numerical Experimentation (WCRP/CAS/WGNE) • Exploring links to WCRP Working Groups on Seasonal to Interannual Prediction (WCRP/CLIVAR/WGSIP) and Coupled Modeling (WCRP/CAS/WGCM)

  12. C20C Phases of Activity • Phase 1 (prior to 2003) : SST and sea ice • Hadley Centre provides HadISST1.1 SST and sea ice data set as lower boundary conditions • Integrate over 1871-2002 (at least 1949-2002) • Ensembles of at least 4 members • Phase 2 (2003 - ) : atmospheric composition • Greenhouse gases – CO2, O3, etc. • Aerosols (volcanic) • Solar variability • Phase 3 (2004 - ) : land surface variability • specified evolution of soil wetness and vegetation

  13. Current Activities • Third Workshop • 19-23 April 2004; hosted by ICTP (Trieste, Italy) • Results of Phase 1 integrations; initial Phase 2 results • Planning for Phase 2 and beyond • Representatives of WCRP programs – discussion of how to specify/deal with forcings, coupled models • Planning for comparison to coupled models • Coupling to mixed layer or dynamical ocean • Coordination with WGCM • Efficient estimation of anthropogenic signals

  14. Issues • What are the limitations of AGCM runs that have no direct coupling to the ocean surface? Are local/regional fluxes misleading? • How should we include coupled models in C20C work, e.g. thermohaline-forced variations in climate? understanding interannual predictability? • Should we adopt a set of common or core diagnostics that all groups will produce in order to contribute to the IPCC assessment (model evaluation) in a more systematic way?

  15. Future … • Report of Third Workshop to CLIVAR 2004 Conference in June 2004 • Input to model evaluation or other relevant sections of 2005 IPCC assessment • Fourth C20C Workshop in 2006 tentatively being planned for Exeter, UK

More Related