Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction...

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Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE CRC, Dep Climate Change & Energy Efficiency

Transcript of Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction...

Page 1: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm?

Dr David JonesManager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction

Bureau of Meteorology

Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE CRC, Dep Climate Change & Energy Efficiency

Page 2: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Overview

• The big picture – global trends and the last few years.

• The last few years in Australia – an aberration or part of a trend?• Looking to the future of climate change.

Page 3: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

• January 2009 heatwave (Vic & South Australia) – 374 excess deaths in Vic alone.

• February 2009, Black Saturday – 173 deaths, 414 serious injuries. Insured cost of ~$1 billion.

• August and November 2009 heatwaves – severe crop damage.• March 2010 Melbourne hail storm. Insured cost of ~$1 billion.• March 2010 Perth hail storm. Insured cost of ~$1 billion.• Inland flooding 2010/11: January NSW/QLD, September Vic, Oct

NSW, January & February Vic/Tas.• Queensland flooding 2010/11• Queensland coast – Maryborough, Rockhampton

December/January 2011• Darling Downs and west – January/February 2011• Brisbane – January 2011• Total insurance claims > $2 billion.• Tropical cyclone Yasi – strongest Queensland cyclone since 1918?

Extremes in the Last Few Years

Page 4: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Are Global Weather & Climate Disasters Escalating?

Count of weather disasters suggests so – from Munich Re (Neumayer and Barthel 2011)

“Weather” disasters

“geological” disasters

Page 5: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Is the Cost of Global Weather & Climate Disasters Escalating?

Hard to tell – changes in demographics, wealth and inflation (Neumayer and Barthel 2011)

Traditional Approach

Geographical Approach

Page 6: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Why Might we Expect a Trend?

400,000 years of data

Currently ~395 ppm (or ~460 e-ppm)

Most of the observed increase in globally averaged temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due

to the observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations (IPCC 2007)

Page 7: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Global Temperatures in 2010 (World Meteorological Organization)

+0.53°C warmest year on record,though a statistical tie with 1998 and 2005.

Page 8: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Global Rainfall in 2010 (NOAA)

~50mm above average – the wettest year on record → accelerating hydrological cycle, likely to give rise to more floods and more droughts.

Page 9: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Record High Sea Level (CSIRO)

Record high sea levels in 2009/10 → more coastal areas at risk of inundation, increased vulnerability to storm surges.

Page 10: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Tropical Cyclone Activity (FSU)

But, near record low levels of tropical cyclone activity around the planet.

Page 11: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

• Direct effects of climate change on individual extreme events: e.g., storms, tropical cyclones & heatwaves

• Indirect (background) effects: e.g., sea level rise exacerbating floods, higher temperatures leading to drying of forest fuels, lower fuel loads (due to winter drying)

• Effects on resilience & preparedness: e.g.,– Rural depopulation due to drought less fire fighting

volunteers?– Uncertain return period for events (leading to over/under

investment in preparedness)– Non-availability of insurance or insurance too expensive– Uncertainty delaying or stopping investment decisions– Long-term drought (or perceptions of fire risk) damaging

rural economies

Climate Change Impacts – Extremes, Safety and Infrastructure

Page 12: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Australian Temperatures

Temperature has increased by about 0.7 C since 1960. 2010 rather cooler than recent years.

Page 13: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Changes in Maximum Temperature Extremes

Hot days becoming more numerous and cold less numerous

Page 14: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Australian Rainfall Trends

Increase in many parts of northern and central areas and decrease in the south and east

Page 15: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Cumulated Fire Danger

Melbourne Airport (“central Victoria”)Clear impact of warming and recent long-drought.

Start of the long dry

13 year drought

Page 16: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

2010: Second Wettest Year on Record

One of the strongest La Nina. Possibly strongest since 1917/18 → record wet across north and east.

But record dry in the southwest?

Page 17: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Trends in Heavy Precipitation

2010 a record, but trend is very weak or non-existentDependent on threshold and dominated by variability.

Page 18: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Change in Australian Sea Level

Since the early 1990s, sea level rise has been 1 to 3 cm/decade in the south and east and 7 to 10 cm/decade in the north and west

Page 19: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Central Queensland CoastSea Level

~2.5cm/decade or ~9cm since the last major (1973-75) La Niña sequence.

y = 0.2083x + 2395.3

R2 = 0.028

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a L

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Linear (Rosslyn Bay,Queensland)

Page 20: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Tropical Cyclones

Yasi – strongest Queensland TC since 1918 and possibly 1899.

But no evidence of an increasing trend.TC numbers appear to be overall in decline, but a lot of uncertainty.

Number of severe tropical cyclones impact QLD

Page 21: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Projections for Australia in 2030 (CSIRO & BoM)

Warmer by 0.4 to 2.0°C 10-50% increase in days over 35°C 10-80% decrease in days below 0°C Up to 10% less annual rainfall in SE Australia Up to 20% less annual rainfall in SW Australia Up to 10% more summer rainfall on east coast Up to 10% more autumn rainfall inland Heavier rainfall where average rainfall increases or decreases slightly Increase in intensity of tropical cyclones

Page 22: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

The Future Rapid Warming Expected

+1.7ºC

600ppm

+2.7ºC

850ppm

+3.2ºC

1250ppm

Warming will be largely dictated by CO2 emissions. Sea level rise and warming will continue for centuries.

Page 23: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

Rainfall Changes

Rainfall change for 2090-2099 relative to 1980-1999.

Drying across southern Australia (and indeed most subtropical areas).

Page 24: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

The Hydrological Cycle

Climate models and observations reveal a number of robust responses:

• Atmospheric moisture holding capacity rises rapidly with temperature – about 7%/degree

• Evaporation and rainfall increase globally – around 2%/degree

• The subtropics tend to dry – particularly in winter.→The average rainfall intensity rises, but the number of rain days tends to fall.→Droughts become more severe and floods become more severe→ Change in fire regimes

Page 25: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.

In Summary

• The last few years have been highly unusual:Record hot and dry drought in southeast

Australia;Record number of heatwaves;Record (?) number of heavy raindays;Two unusual storms – Perth and Melbourne;Strongest TC on Queensland coast since

1918 (or earlier); andRecord southwest WA dry

• Some changes are consistent with global warming – but for many there is not strong evidence to draw a link (yet).

Page 26: Extreme Weather Events: The New Norm? Dr David Jones Manager of Climate Monitoring & Prediction Bureau of Meteorology Acknowledge: CSIRO, BoM, IPCC, ACE.