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Analysis of Extremes in Climate Science

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Title: Analysis of Extremes in Climate Science


1
  • Analysis of Extremes in Climate Science
  • Francis Zwiers
  • Climate Research Division, Environment Canada.

2
Outline
  • Space and time scales
  • Simple indices
  • Annual maxima
  • Multiple maxima per year
  • Incorporating spatial information
  • One-off events

Photo F. Zwiers
3
Space and time scales
  • Very wide range of space and time scales
  • Language used in climate circles not very precise
  • High impact (but not really extreme)
  • Exceedence of a relatively low threshold (e.g.,
    90th percentile of daily precipitation amounts)
  • Rare events (long return period)
  • Unprecedented events (in the available record)
  • Range from very small scale (tornadoes) to large
    scale (eg drought)

4
Space
Local
Continental
Regional
Time
Process studies
hours
Many observations per season, many seasons
days
month
Few observations per period (seasons to
interannual)
season
A single observation in the period of
interest (multi-annual and longer) Process
studies
years
Extremes likely to be conditioned by climate
state in all cases
5
Simple indices
  • Time series of annual counts or exceedences
  • E.g., number of exceedence above 90th percentile
  • Some studies use thresholds as high as 99.7th
    percentile
  • Coupled with simple trend analysis techniques or
    standard detection and attribution methods
  • Detected anthropogenic influence in observed
    surface temperature indices
  • Perfect and imperfect model studies of potential
    to detect anthropogenic influence in temperature
    and precipitation extremes
  • Statistical issues include
  • resolution of observational data
  • adaptation of threshold to base period
  • use of simple analysis techniques that implicitly
    assume data are Gaussian

6
Indices approach is attractive for practical
reasons - basis for ETCCDI strategy
7
Regional workshops 2002-2005
8
Indices of temperature extremes
JJA warm days
DJF Cold nights
Alexander, Zhang, et al 2005
  • Anthropogenic influence detected in indices of
    cold nights, warm nights, and cold days

Christidis, et al 2005
9
Some simple indices not so simple
Rate at which 90th percentile is exceeded in
simulated 60-year records (when threshold is
estimated from first 30-years)
Number of days per year in Canada with
temperature above 99th percentile
Zhang, Hegerl, Zwiers, Kenyon, 2005
10
Annual extremes
  • Tmax, Tmin, P24-hour, etc
  • Analyzed by fitting an extreme value distribution
  • Typically use the GEV distribution
  • Fitted by MLE or L-moments
  • Analyses sometimes
  • impose a feasibility constraint
  • include covariates
  • incorporate some spatial information
  • Often used to
  • compare models and observations
  • compare present with future

11
Annual extremes
  • Detection and attribution is an emerging
    application
  • include expected responses to external forcing as
    covariates
  • one approach is via Bayes Factors
  • Main Assumptions
  • Observed process is weakly stationary
  • Annual sample large enough to justify use of EV
    distribution
  • Some challenges
  • Data coverage
  • Scaling issue
  • How best to use spatial information
  • What to compare model output against
  • Are data being used efficiently?

12
Observational data rather messy
  • Uneven availability in space and time
  • Weak spatial dependence
  • Spatial averages over grid boxes may not be good
    estimates of grid box quantities simulated by
    climate models

Trend 5-day max pcp 1950-99 (data Alexander et
al. 2006)
13
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14
20-yr 24-hr PCP extremes current climate
15
Projected waiting time for current climate 20-yr
24-hr PCP event
16
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17
Multiple extremes per year
  • Considering only annual extreme is probably not
    the best use of the available data resource
  • r-largest techniques (r gt 1)
  • peaks-over-threshold approach (model exceedence
    process and exceedences)
  • Some potential issues include
  • clustering
  • Cyclostationary rather than stationary nature of
    many observed series
  • Has implications for both exceedence process and
    representation of exceedences

18
Using spatial information
  • Practice varies from
  • crude (e.g., simple averaging of GEV parameters
    over adjacent points)
  • to more sophisticated (e.g., Kriging of
    parameters or estimated quantiles)
  • Fully generalized model would require simplifying
    assumptions about spatial dependence structure
  • Precipitation has rather complex spatial
    structure because it is conditioned by surface
    topography, atmospheric circulation, strength of
    moisture sources, etc.

19
Isolated, very extreme events
  • How to deal with outliers?
  • Annual max daily pcp amount that is much larger
    than others, and occurs in 1885
  • Recently observed value that lies well beyond
    range of previously observed values
  • Both would heavily leverage extreme-value
    distributions (raising questions about the
    suitability of the statistical model)
  • Recent events also beg the question was this
    due to human interference in the climate system?

20
Surface temperature extremes
  • Human influence
  • Has likely affected temperature extremes
  • May have increased the risk of extremely warm
    summer conditions regionally.

FAQ 9.1, Fig. 1
Fig 9.13a
Risk of extreme warm European summer in 1990s
(1.6C gt 1961-90 mean) - natural forcing
only - all forcing
21
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22
Summary
  • Several methods available
  • Annual (or seasonal extremes), r-largest, POT,
    simple indices
  • EV distributions can be fitted by moments,
    l-moments, mle
  • Latter also allows inclusion of covariates (e.g.,
    time)
  • Should evaluate
  • Feasibility
  • Stationarity assumption
  • Goodness-of-fit, etc
  • Data limitations
  • quality, availability, continuity, etc
  • suitability for climate model assessment
  • R-largest and POT methods use data more
    efficiently
  • Do need to be more careful about assumptions
  • Data may not be readily available for widespread
    use
  • Formal climate change detection studies on
    extremes beginning to appear despite challenges
  • Also attempting to estimate FAR (Fraction of
    Attributable Risk) in the case of one-of events
  • How does one pose the question and avoid
    selection bias?

23
The End
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