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The Tyndall Centre comprises nine UK research institutions. It is funded by three Research Councils - NERC, EPSRC and ESRC – and receives additional support.

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Presentation on theme: "The Tyndall Centre comprises nine UK research institutions. It is funded by three Research Councils - NERC, EPSRC and ESRC – and receives additional support."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Tyndall Centre comprises nine UK research institutions. It is funded by three Research Councils - NERC, EPSRC and ESRC – and receives additional support from the DTI Climate Scenarios in Vulnerability, Impact and Adaptation Assessments: week 1 lessons AIACC Scenarios Training Course Norwich, 16-25 April 2002 Dr Mike Hulme

2 The Tyndall Centre comprises nine UK research institutions. It is funded by three Research Councils - NERC, EPSRC and ESRC – and receives additional support from the DTI Seven Lessons from Week 1 (1) conduct case studies of past climate ‘events’ to illustrate vulnerability (2) never forget the future in a fundamental sense is ‘unknown’ – extrapolatory, normative, exploratory scenarios (3) aim to integrate your scenario information – socio-economic, CO2, climate, sea-level (SRES narrative framework may help) (4) pay much attention to the quality of your observed data – case studies, model evaluation, reference climate to perturb (5) conduct sensitivity studies for your sector/model – you’ll learn a lot (6) if you can keep things simple, keep them simple – is sensitivity enough? will a GCM(s) suffice? (7) don’t take on an RCM if you’re not in the ‘game’ already and certainly not unless you have a ‘friend’

3 The Tyndall Centre comprises nine UK research institutions. It is funded by three Research Councils - NERC, EPSRC and ESRC – and receives additional support from the DTI Be as clear as you can about what you really need ….. not want you or others may want  How many scenarios do you need? Which uncertainties are you going to explore?  What non-climate information do you need in your scenario(s)?  Do you need local data for case studies/sites, or national/regional coverage?  What spatial resolution in your climate model output do you really need – 300k, 100k, 50k, 10k, 1k? Can you justify this choice?  Do you need changes in average climate, or in variability?  Do you need changes in daily weather, or just monthly totals?  What climate variables are essential for your study?

4 The Tyndall Centre comprises nine UK research institutions. It is funded by three Research Councils - NERC, EPSRC and ESRC – and receives additional support from the DTI So for example …. Case studies in vulnerability Sensitivity studies Scoping the extent of the problem – semi-qualitative work Model-based studies – model will dictate the requirements (e.g. crop or water or health model) Risk-based (threshold) studies Large-scale (regional) applications (gridded; 1k, 10k, 50k, etc.) versus site or catchment specific applications National, generic applications (UKCIP02) Who is your audience and how will you communicate with it?

5 The Tyndall Centre comprises nine UK research institutions. It is funded by three Research Councils - NERC, EPSRC and ESRC – and receives additional support from the DTI Why does creating climate scenarios give us so many problems? Problem 1. Models are not accurate …. … so we ‘cannot’ use data from climate models directly in environmental or social simulation models … add model changes to baseline – mean and variability … use a weather generator

6 The Tyndall Centre comprises nine UK research institutions. It is funded by three Research Councils - NERC, EPSRC and ESRC – and receives additional support from the DTI Why does creating climate scenarios give us so many problems? Problem 2. Different climate models give different results … … so we have difficulty knowing which climate model(s) to use … select on basis of validation, age, representativeness, accessibility – or use them all!

7 The Tyndall Centre comprises nine UK research institutions. It is funded by three Research Councils - NERC, EPSRC and ESRC – and receives additional support from the DTI Why does creating climate scenarios give us so many problems? Problem 3. It is expensive to run many (global/regional) climate model experiments for many future emissions …..… so we often have to make choices about which emissions scenarios from which we build our climate scenarios … may not matter much for 2020s, but will make a real difference by 2080s … pattern-scaling methods may help if we only have results from only one emissions scenario

8 The Tyndall Centre comprises nine UK research institutions. It is funded by three Research Councils - NERC, EPSRC and ESRC – and receives additional support from the DTI Why does creating climate scenarios give us so many problems? Problem 4. Climate models give us results at the ‘wrong’ spatial scale … … so we have to develop and apply one or more downscaling methods … these may be simple (interpolation) or complex (statistical downscaling, weather generators) … RCMs may get you so far, but probably not far enough

9 The Tyndall Centre comprises nine UK research institutions. It is funded by three Research Councils - NERC, EPSRC and ESRC – and receives additional support from the DTI Our problems would be much easier if …. Climate models were fully accurate Different climate models gave the same results One could run a GCM experiment over 200 simulated years in one day on a PC Climate models had a resolution of 1km But they don’t!


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