A new paper by ICARUS researchers and international colleagues has been published in Climate Risk Management. The paper is Open Access.
Past
and future climate change in the context of memorable seasonal extremes
T.
Matthews, D. Mullan, R.L. Wilby, C. Broderick, C. Murphy
Abstract
It is thought that
direct personal experience of extreme weather events could result in greater public
engagement and policy response to climate change. Based on this premise, we
present a set of future climate scenarios for Ireland communicated in the
context of recent, observed extremes. Specifically, we examine the changing
likelihood of extreme seasonal conditions in the long-term observational
record, and explore how frequently such extremes might occur in a changed Irish
climate according to the latest model projections. Over the period (1900–2014)
records suggest a greater than 50-fold increase in the likelihood of the
warmest recorded summer (1995), whilst the likelihood of the wettest winter
(1994/95) and driest summer (1995) has respectively doubled since 1850. The
most severe end-of-century climate model projections suggest that summers as cool
as 1995 may only occur once every ~7 years, whilst winters as wet as 1994/95
and summers as dry as 1995 may increase by factors of~8 and ~10 respectively. Contrary to previous
research, we find no evidence for increased wintertime storminess as the Irish
climate warms, but caution that this conclusion may be an artefact of the
metric employed. It is hoped that framing future climate scenarios in the
context of extremes from living memory will help communicate the scale of the
challenge climate change presents, and in so doing bridge the gap between
climate scientists and wider society.
Fig. 8.
Evolution of z-scores in the historical and RCP experiment calculated for
centred, 30-year sliding windows. The shaded region of the CMIP5 ensemble spans
5–95th percentiles, whilst the solid lines provide the median. The
discontinuity between the historical and RCP 8.5 medians is because only a
subset of historical model runs continues to RCP 8.5. Note that the observed
series are also displayed in each panel and the different scaling on the
respective y-axes.