Title: Climate Change: Observations
1Climate Change Observations Predictions
- Presenter Neil Plummer
- National Climate Centre
- Lead Author Dr Scott Power
- Bureau of Meteorology Research
- Centre
- Acknowledgments Richard Whitaker, Phil Reid and
other NCC colleagues
2Summary
- The worlds climate varies - decadal and longer
- The world has warmed up, sea-level has risen
- Is warming due to humans?
- How do climate models work?
- How warm will the world get?
- How high will sea-level rise?
- Observations - past future - crucial
3What causes climate change? Variations in the
suns output Large meteorite impact
Variations on the Earths orbit (Milutin
Milankovitch) Variations in ocean currents
Volcanoes (Mt. Tambora 1815) Variations in the
chemical composition of the atmosphere (human
impact?)
4Observing the climate system
5How do we know what past climates were like? -
Weve only been taking measurements for about
the last 300 years or so. We use so called
proxy indicators - interpretation of a range of
naturally occurring phenomena that are weather
sensitive
6 Global issues Networks
7Global GCOS issues
- Pacific Island GCOS
- Networks
- GSN, GUAN, GAW, various terrestrial
- Poor collection rates for CLIMAT and CLIMAT TEMP
- Poor collection rates for daily and hourly
historical data, including metadata - Data Management
- Databases, data rescue
- Training workshop, Bureau of Met, Melbourne, 29
November to 3 December
8Global Temperature Increase
Increased volcanism and decreased solar output
Decreased volcanism and increased solar output
Greenhouse
9Global Temperature Increase
10Decadal Variability
11Annual Streamflow into Perth water supply system,
1911-99
50 decline
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13Summary Observed Global Climate Changes
- Warming greater over land than oceans
- Minimum temperatures increased more than maximum
temperatures - Decreases in cold extremes, weaker increases in
hot extremes - Weak increases in precipitation and cloud
- Slight increases in heavy precipitation events
14and more
- Ocean surface and subsurface warming
- Lowest 8 km of the atmosphere warming since at
least 1958 - Sea level rise of 10-20 cm since 1900
- Snow cover extent decreased
- Sea ice extent decreased
- Glaciers reducing in length and volume
- Animals, plants shifts in locations and seasonal
behaviour
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17Sources of Greenhouse gases
- Include
- Fossil fuel burning
- Land use change, including deforestation
- Biomass burning
- Cement production
- CFCs, HFCs, HCFCs,
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19The Enhanced Greenhouse Effect
- There is new and stronger evidence that most of
the warming over the last 50 years is
attributable to human activities
(Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
Third Assessment Report 2001) - Stabilisation of greenhouse gas concentrations
in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent
dangerous anthropogenic interference with the
climate system - (Article 2 of the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change)
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21Future scenariosModelling the climate system
22Climate Model Uncertainties
- Climate system feedbacks
- - water vapour and clouds
- - ice and snow
- - land surface
- Deep ocean circulation
- Global carbon cycle
- Atmospheric chemistry
- Future emission scenarios
As scale decreases, uncertainty increases
23Climate forcing increase in CO2
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25Regional variations in projections
- Temperature 2xCO2 transient control
- Bureau of Met. model
- Precipitation 2xCO2 transient control
26Projections of global temperature
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3021st C sea-level projections (IPCC, 2001)
31Projections for 21st C
- Models suggest that
- 1.4-5.8 oC, 0.09-0.88 cm sea-level rise
- More rapid changes than occurred last century and
rises are expected to continue beyond the coming
century - Fewer frosts cold days cold nights
- More hot days mild nights
- More heavy rainfall events
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33Further Information
- IPCC Third Assessment Report 2001
- Greenhouse Effect and Climate Change booklet
- Australian State of Environment report
(Atmosphere) 2001 - CSIRO Climate Change Projections for Australia
- www.bom.gov.au
34Irreversible Change?