Defining the present climate: Why does it matter? What help exists? Pandora Hope (BMRC) and Ian Foster (DAWA) Acknowledgements: Colin Terry (Water Corp),

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Climate Change and Sea Level Rise in the Pacific Islands
Advertisements

Curtin University is a trademark of Curtin University of Technology CRICOS Provider Code 00301J CURTIN UNI WATER STRATEGY 1. THE GLOBAL CHALLENGES 2013.
Introduction  Rising temperature and changes in the frequency and magnitude of precipitation events due to climate change (IPCC-AR4 report) are anticipated.
1 Assiniboine River Water Demand and Water Supply Studies Prepared by : Bob Harrison, P. Eng. and Abul Kashem, P. Eng. Surface Water Management Section.
CO2 (ppm) Thousands of years ago Carbon dioxide concentrations over the last.
1 Climate change and the cryosphere. 2 Outline Background, climatology & variability Role of snow in the global climate system Contemporary observations.
Jim Noel Service Coordination Hydrologist March 2, 2012
How/why our climate has changed Neville Nicholls, Pandora Hope, Lynda Chambers, & Bertrand Timbal Bureau of Meteorology Research Centre, Melbourne.
Impacts of Climate Change on the Tualatin River Basin Nathan VanRheenen, Erin Clancy, Richard Palmer, PhD, PE Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
Efficiencies in Murrumbidgee Irrigation Area GL 2000/01 Irrigation water (surface) Irrigation water (groundwater) Rainfall Regional groundwater
Assessment of apparent non-stationarity in hydroclimatic series: A case study from Western Australia Bryson Bates (CSIRO, Australia) Richard Chandler (UCL,
Australia’s likely future climate and impacts Penny Whetton IPAA March 2010 Climate Adaptation National Research Flagship.
Impacts of Climate Change on Physical Systems PPT
Developing Tools to Enable Water Resource Managers to Plan for & Adapt to Climate Change Amy Snover, PhD Climate Impacts Group University of Washington.
Understanding Drought
Correction of Particulate Matter Concentrations to Reference Temperature and Pressure Conditions Stefan R. Falke and Rudolf B. Husar Center for Air Pollution.
Climate Futures for Tasmania Steve Wilson TIAR/School of Agricultural Science University of Tasmania.
Andrew Scanlon Environment and Sustainability Manager Hydro Tasmania Drought and Climate Change.
Paul Holper, CSIRO Marine & Atmospheric Research, Australia Neil Plummer, Bureau of Meteorology, Australia ACRE Workshop, Zurich, June 2008 CAWCR web portal.
Expected Change of the Key Agrometeorological Parameters in Central Europe by 2050 Trnka M. 1,3, Štěpánek P. 2, Dubrovský M. 3, Semerádová D. 1,3, Eitzinger.
Economic Cooperation Organization Training Course on “Drought and Desertification” Alanya Facilities, Antalya, TURKEY presented by Ertan TURGU from Turkish.
© CSIR Quasi- uniform C48 grid with resolution about 210 km Climate Modelling at the CSIR NRE NWP and RCM capacity build around the.
© Crown copyright Met Office Climate Projections for West Africa Andrew Hartley, Met Office: PARCC national workshop on climate information and species.
Available soil water- a practical communication tool in southern NSW Michael Cashen Agricultural Climatologist Acknowledge.
Rainfall & Temperature Scenarios for Sri Lanka under the anticipated Climate Change B.R.S.B. Basnayake 1, Janaka Ratnasiri 2, J.C. Vithanage 2 1 Centre.
Baseline Climatology of Viti Levu (Fiji) and Current Climatic Trends Melchior Mataki AIACC-SIS09 Pacific Centre for Environment and Sustainable Development.
© Crown copyright Met Office Case Study: Real world application of crop model impacts projections.
Contact: Lorraine FitzGerald Private Sector Officer Adaptation Scotland The Changing Climate of Ayrshire Your Sustainable Future.
Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment: South West WA.
Forcing BAM With HADISST1.1 for the Period S. Grainger, C.S. Frederiksen and J.M. Sisson Bureau of Meteorology Research Centre, Melbourne, Australia.
Impact of Climate Change on Water Resources Water Corporation Technical Seminars 10 July 2006 Brian Ryan CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research.
The La Niña Influence on Central Alabama Rainfall Patterns.
Presented by Binaya Pasakhala Assessing Vulnerability of People’s Livelihood in Far-western Nepal: Implications on Adaptation to Climate Change.
March 2005 ACIAR Project: Bridging the gaps between SCFs and decision makers Overview of Australian Case Studies John Mullen Research Leader, Economics.
Climate Change and its Effect on Safety and Infrastructure Dr David Jones Head of Climate Analysis & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO,
Climate Change Science -- the Present Stuart Godfrey (retired CSIRO Oceanographer) What is it like being a Greenhouse climate scientist? Perth, WA river.
Climate Futures for Tasmania: Prospects, Impacts and Information for Adaption Options Nathan Bindoff et al. ACE CRC, DPIW, Hydro Tasmania,SES,BoM, GA,
Trends in Iowa Precipitation: Observed and Projected Future Trends Christopher J. Anderson, PhD Scientist, Assistant Director Climate Science Initiative.
 Detection of Trends in Extreme Weather Phenomena Comparing the skill of the Block Maxima and Point Process approaches ASP 2011 Colloquim: Statistical.
Fig. 1: Upper-tropospheric conditions for two major storms: 300 hPa geopotential height (red) and wind speed (shaded grey) Rainfall projections relating.
Global Change Impacts on Rice- Wheat Provision and the Environmental Consequences Peter Grace SKM - Australia Cooperative Research Centre for Greenhouse.
Climate Change Scenario Analysis in the Future Over Climate Change Scenario Analysis in the Future Over western of China Ying Xu Xuejie Gao Yun Gao National.
How Extreme South West Rainfall Has Changed It is likely that climate change will be felt most through changes in extreme events.
Trends in Precipitation and Stream Discharge over the Past Century for the Continental United States Andrew Simon 1 and Lauren Klimetz 1,2 1 USDA-ARS National.
Australian Climate: The Past 50 Years of Change Mr Bruce Stewart Assistant Director (Climate and Oceans)
Western Australia Annual Preparedness Briefing Mike Bergin, Regional Director 7 September 2015.
The scale of the water resource challenge Professor Kevin Hiscock School of Environmental Sciences University of East Anglia
Assessing the Influence of Decadal Climate Variability and Climate Change on Snowpacks in the Pacific Northwest JISAO/SMA Climate Impacts Group and the.
Estimating climate variability over the next 1-25 years Dr Scott Power Dr Scott Power IOCI, August 2005 IOCI, August 2005.
Climate Change and the Three R’s LGA Climate Change Summit Anita Crisp June 2008.
When the well runs dry: a spatiotemporal assessment of the Wheatbelt's water vulnerability Boruff, B.J.¹, and Biggs, E.², Pauli, N.¹, Clifton, J. ¹ and.
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE TEACHERS’ CONFERENCE ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE TEACHERS’ CONFERENCE, Borki Molo, Poland, 7-10 February 2007 Extreme Climatic and atmospheric.
1 Implications of trends in the Asian monsoon for population migrations Dr. D. B. Stephenson, Dr. E. Black, Prof. J.M. Slingo Department of Meteorology,
Indicators for Climate Change over Mauritius Mr. P Booneeady Pr. SDDV Rughooputh.
Global Warming The heat is on!. What do you know about global warming? Did you know: Did you know: –the earth on average has warmed up? –some places have.
Desert environments in Namibia their formation, location and climate
Northeast Regional Climate Information Projected Climate Changes for the Northeast More frequent and intense extreme precipitation events, 100-year storm.
A template for business people (you can use this PPT and modify it for your needs) Date, author, subject/ theme, etc. „Baltic Sea Region Challenges and.
A template for policy makers (you can use this PPT and modify it for your needs) Date, author, subject/ theme, etc. „Baltic Sea Region Challenges and Chances.
Abstract No. M02 1. Introduction Many of Australia’s water management areas are over-allocated or highly developed, particularly in the Murray-Darling.
© Crown copyright Met Office ETC – DRR CCA 1° Core Team Meeting ETC Technical Paper on Extreme Weather and Climate Events Peter Dempsey, ,
The UK at risk? Cameron Dunn Chief Examiner The UK at risk?
Trends in Iowa Precipitation: Observed and Projected Future Trends
Climate Change Science
José J. Hernández Ayala Department of Geography University of Florida
Climate Change and the Midwest: Issues and Impacts
Preparation of Local Adaptation Plans & Establishment of Local Offices
Surface water status reports
Climate Change and Agriculture
Quantitative aspects in Cyprus (groundwater)
Presentation transcript:

Defining the present climate: Why does it matter? What help exists? Pandora Hope (BMRC) and Ian Foster (DAWA) Acknowledgements: Colin Terry (Water Corp), Andrew Watkins (NCC), Jay Lawrimore (NCDC), Lynda Chambers (BMRC), Peter Powers (BMRC)

Outline ‘Standard’ meteorological climatology Observed Trends and Breakpoints Examples of the issues and responses in various sectors Available help

Defining the present climate

Defining the present climate

Trends – A reason to change the ‘baseline’ definition? Combined global land-surface air and sea surface temperatures (degrees Centigrade) 1861 to 1998, relative to 1961 to1990; University of East Anglia, UK

National Climatic Data Center l

National Climate Centre, Australian Bureau of Meteorology

Annual Temperature SWWA Created using “Diagnose”

Summer Temperature SWWA

Early Winter Temperature SWWA

National Climate Centre, Australian Bureau of Meteorology

Seasonality of SWWA Rainfall Decrease

Early Winter SWWA Rainfall Break-point in time series at 1968/69 NB: IOCI in general uses a breakpoint of 1975/76, which is the breakpoint of the sea-level pressure data in the region

Changes to the ‘baseline’ WMO suggested , but this was not adopted Some agencies are using the full period, e.g. NCDC uses Many sectors use the time-period most relevant to their purpose

Major System Impacts Integrated water supply scheme – source development plan 2001 had 2nd worst inflow to Perth dams 8 year sequence of lowered streamflow to 2005

Changes to Streamflow Probability 177 GL is the mean over

Response of Water Corp. Major desalination of seawater Recycling of treated wastewater Better management of dam catchments to improve inflows Trading for water from irrigation cooperatives

Salt risk and land-use NB: This is an example only. The data is from station data interpolated onto a grid (Jones and Weymouth 1997). There will be differences from maps produced using other methods of interpolation < 900 mm mm > 1100 mm mm Forestry, Mining Isohyet limits from Colin Terry, maps plotted using NCC gridded rainfall data by Pandora Hope

System Response - Waterlogging Frequency

Wheat Yield Trend Source: ABS state averages

Agricultural Responses Fewer very wet years may have affected rates of salinity spread Sowing opportunities tend to occur later Decreased waterlogging in susceptible areas. This may have improved conditions for cropping in higher rainfall areas Technology changes have improved productivity despite generally drier years

Tools available Australian Rainman (QDNR, BoM et al) DIAGNOSE; CD or website (v. large): ftp://ftp.bom.gov.au/anon/home/bmrc/perm/append/install_v3/ MetAccess (CSIRO et al) Climate Calculator – Dept Ag Future projections – IOCI, CSIRO

Conclusions There have been strong trends in rainfall in Western Australia, causing sectors to re- examine the climate ‘baseline’ Impacts have been strong in some sectors, and variable in others There is a range of tools that can help define climatology, opportunities and risks.

Climate Calculator – DAWA Risk Charts

Agriculture - Altered rainfall pattern