CMUG Climate Modelling User Group - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

CMUG Climate Modelling User Group

Description:

CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:38
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: ensembles4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group


1
CMUGClimate Modelling User Group
  • Roger Saunders
  • Met Office Hadley Centre

2
Overview and Meeting Aims
  • Some key points from climate modelling
    perspective
  • Meeting aims
  • Inputs and outputs
  • Wider perspective

3
CMUG is here to facilitate
Sea-ice
Sea-level
Sea surface temperature
Ocean Colour
Glaciers and ice caps
Land Cover
Fire disturbance
Cloud properties
Ozone
Aerosols
Greenhouse Gases
Climate Modellers
Reanalyses
4
CMUG folks here
Met Office Hadley Centre HadGEM, FOAM, HadISST
X
Paul Van Der Linden
Roger Saunders
Mark Ringer
ECMWF IFS, ERA, MACC
MPI-Meteorology ECHAM, JSBACH
MétéoFrance Arpege, MOCAGE, CNRM-CM, Mercator
X
Dick Dee
Thierry Phulpin
Alex Loew
Serge Planton
David Tan
Silvia Kloster
Stefan Kinne
Iryna Khlystova
5
Issues for climate modelling
  • Higher resolution (horiz, vertical, time)
  • Regional climate prediction (e.g. UKCP)
  • More physical processes
  • Seasonal to decadal prediction
  • Use of reanalyses for climate
  • Seamless prediction - weather prediction to
    climate change using same model
  • Metrics developed to evaluate models CCI
    datasets can help here
  • The way we use observational data is evolving

6
Climate monitoring and attribution
Different groups can produce defensible, but
statistically inconsistent estimates of trends.
Need for better error characterisation
7
Error characterisation of CDRs
  • An estimate of the errors for each CDR produced
    is essential for use in climate applications
  • The types of errors recently defined by GCOS
  • Accuracy The rms difference between the single
    or averaged values of a variable and the truth.
  • Stability The extent to which accuracy of a time
    average remains constant over a longer time
    period (e.g., annual average relative to decadal
    average).
  • The importance of specifying each depends on the
    application
  • Errors should be specified on a FOV basis.
    Aggregated error estimates are not sufficient
  • Single sensor products are simpler than merged
    products
  • Error correlations are also important to document

8
Use of observations evolving..
Observation simulator
  • Forward modelling of measured quantities
    (radiances, skin SST, radar reflectivities)
    rather than high-level products (profile
    retrievals, bulk SST, cloud properties)
  • Ensures more direct comparison of equivalent
    model variable with observations
  • This was the key for use of ISCCP clouds

9
Multi-model analysis using satellite simulators
HadGEM1 (MO)
MMF 4km (CSU)
CloudSat
MMF 1km (CSU)
LMDZ (CNRS)
dBZgt-25
(Bodas-Salcedo et al., submitted to BAMS)
10
Implications for requirements
  • The new ECV datasets must have added value over
    existing ones and future proof for model
    evolutions
  • Datasets should have global coverage and for some
    applications gt15 years
  • Be clear about applications for specific dataset
    as this drives the required accuracy
  • Climate trend monitoring high stability
    and accuracy
  • Change detection high
    stability
  • Evaluate processes in model high accuracy
  • Model validation high
    stability and accuracy
  • Assimilation high
    accuracy (and stability)
  • Uncertainty estimates are as important as product
    itself for all applications. Correlation of
    errors in space/time also important

11
Validation of SST
Coverage of buoys
Buoy validation of ARC SST
But what about ocean colour?
12
Meeting Aims
  • Check ECV project URDs are consistent with the
    needs of Climate Research Groups and GCOS
    requirements, including source traceability
  • Allow ECV teams to explain how their projects
    address the integrated perspective for
    consistency between the ECVs to avoid gaps
  • Start review of product specifications
  • Discuss how to deal with uncertainties in
    products
  • Finalise the ECV projects data needs for ECMWF
    reanalysis data
  • Start a discussion on ECV data set validation
  • Maintain oversight of the position within the
    international framework in which CMUG/CCI is
    operating

13
URDs Common Issues
  • CMUG report on CCI URDs D2.1
  • Define period of TCDRs (1 month-30 years?)
  • Clear specification of requirements for which
    application
  • Some ECVs need clearer error specifications
  • Merged vs single sensor products
  • More interaction with climate modellers in some
    cases
  • Consideration of model simulators where required
  • Consistency between ECVs

14
Integrated view of ECVs
  1. Through ensuring common input datasets are used
    for CDR creation and in some cases common
    pre-processing (e.g. geolocation, land/sea mask,
    cloud detection)
  2. Through comparisons of CDRs for different ECVs
    (e.g. SST, sea-level, sea-ice and ocean colour)
  3. Through comparisons of CDRs with model fields
    (e.g. GHG and Ozone CDRs and MACC model
    profiles/total column amounts) CMUG will be
    involved in development of some observation
    simulators. Pre-cursors of ECVs will be used for
    preparation.
  4. Through studying teleconnections (e.g. El-Nino
    SST shows consistent impact on cloud fields,
    fires).
  5. Through assimilation of CDRs and to assess impact
    on analyses and predictions (e.g. SST in
    ERA-Interim)

15
Outputs from meeting
  • Meeting report of actions agreed by ECV projects
    including updates to URDs and Product Spec.
    docs
  • Meeting report describing strategic position of
    the CMUG, within CCI, in the international arena
  • Material to inform revision of CMUG reports
  • Clarity on requests for ECMWF reanalysis data
  • Clarity on early demonstration of products (if
    feasible) to modellers.

16
Related Activities
  1. GCOS, GSICS (Jan/Feb 2011)
  2. EUMETSAT CAF/CMSAF and SCOPE-CM
  3. NOAA-NASA initiatives (e.g. JPL CMIP5)
  4. WCRP Observation and Assimilation Panel (Apr 11)
  5. Reanalyses (ERACLIM, JRA-55, EURO4M)
  6. Coupled Model Intercomparison Project and
    follow-on activities (Exeter, June 11)
  7. Inputs to IPCC AR-5/6 (interaction with authors)
  8. EU IS-ENES, METAFOR,
  9. EU GMES (MACC, MyOcean, Climate, .)

17

We dont want to leave our climate
research scientists like this!
But like this!
18
Any questions?Please visitwww.cci-cmug.org
cmug_at_metoffice.gov.uk
19
Proposed CMIP5 model runs
Proposed CMIP5 model runs
CCI datasets could start to be used in the
evaluation of these results
AR-5
20
Example of different errors
Stability 0.05K/decade
Accuracy 0.19K
SST
Bias 0.1K
Time
Buoy
Representativity and sampling
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com