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Earth System Science Partnership for Global Change Research

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Title: Earth System Science Partnership for Global Change Research


1
Earth System Science Partnershipfor Global
Change Research
  • an integrated study of the Earth System,
  • the changes occurring to the System, and
  • the implications for global sustainability.

Integrated Regional Studies
2
World Climate Research Programme (WCRP)
  • Established 1980
  • Sponsors WMO (1980), ICSU (1980) and IOC
    (1993)
  • Objectives
  • To determine the predictability of climate
  • To determine the effect of human activities on
    climate

3
Achievements after 25 years of WCRP
  • Significantly improved observing systems
    (atmosphere, ocean, land, cryosphere)
  • Sophisticated coupled climate models
  • Advanced assimilation techniques and forecast
    techniques / systems including ones based on
    ensembles of models
  • L-T predictions possible, e.g. El Nino
  • Another level of knowledge about climate
    predictability and change
  • etc.

4
Challenges for WCRP
  • Seamless prediction problem
  • - medium range, weeks, decades, centuries
  • Prediction of the broader climate/Earth system
  • Demonstrate the usefulness to society of
    WCRP-enabled predictions projections
  • Coordinate implement activities to exploit
    fully
  • - new increasing data streams (environmental
    satellites in situ observations i.e. the
    Argo system)
  • - growth in capability availability of
    computing
  • - increasing complexity breadth of models
  • - increasing data assimilation ability

5
WGNE WGCMWGSFIPABWGSAT
CLIVAR 1995 ?
ACSYS/CliC 19942003/2000 ?
CliC 2000 ?
6
  • WCRP Domains
  • Global Energy and Water Cycle Experiment
  • Climate and Cryosphere
  • Climate Variability and Predictability
  • Stratospheric Processes and their Role in Climate

GEWEX CliC CLIVAR SPARC
7
COPES Coordinated Observation Prediction of
the Earth System
  • AIM
  • To facilitate prediction of the climate/earth
    system variability and change for use in an
    increasing range of practical applications of
    direct relevance, benefit and value to society
  • Goals
  • Determine what aspects of the climate/earth
    system are and are not predictable, at weekly,
    seasonal, interannual and decadal through to
    century time-scales
  • Utilise improving observing systems, data
    assimilation techniques and models of the
    climate/earth system
  • (-gt IGBP, GCOS, NWP centres, )

8
Priorities for the next decade (agreed at
WCRP-Conference, Geneva, 1997)
  • Assessing the nature and predictability of
    seasonal to interdecadal climate variations at
    global and regional scales
  • Providing the scientific basis for operational
    predictions
  • Detecting climate change and attributing causes
  • Projecting the magnitude and rate of
    human-induced change (as input for IPCC, UNFCCC,
    ...)

9
2005 after 25 years of WCRP
New overarching and integrating Strategic
Framework Prediction of entire climate
system (? Earth System) FGGE ? extended
weather prediction TOGA ? seasonal
prediction (tropics)THORPEX ? deterministic 2nd
week prediction esp high impact weather, GWE
COPES ? climate system prediction
10
Coordinated Observation and Prediction of the
Earth System COPES(2005-2015)
  • Project Contributions
  • observing system components
  • process understanding
  • model components
  • interaction with global system
  • (impact and response)
  • assimilation reanalysis
  • prediction scenarios
  • contribution to specific themes

11
Coordinated Observation and Prediction of the
Earth System(2005-2015)
COPES
TF-4
SPARC
TF-3
GEWEX

CLIVAR
CliC
TF-COPES
TF-2
TF-SP
TF-1
12
WGNE WGCMWGSFIPAB
CLIVAR 1995 ?
CliC 2000 ?
TFSP,TF-COPES
Coordinated Observation and Prediction of the
Earth System
13
EXAMPLES of specific objectives
  • Regional climate change
  • Systematic errors in AGCM and CGCM
  • Arid and desert climates
  • Predictability of monsoons
  • Contribution to IPCC WG1 report
  • Improving projection of mean sea level rise
  • Production of climate data sets
  • Chemistry climate models -gt ES models

14
WCRP COPES Status
  • Task Force formed to define and initiate a
    process to plan implement COPES report to
    JSC26 in 2005
  • COPES discussion document available to WCRP
    stakeholders for comments, including suggestions
    for Specific Objectives
  • Reports to JSC
  • Co-chairs B.Hoskins, J.Church
  • Representatives of core projects
  • Chairs of modeling and obs. panels
  • Experts in op. prediction, satellite obs., and
    funding of large programmes
  • Will propose organisation and initial objectives
    of COPES

15
Modelling Panel
  • Coordinate modelling across WCRP
  • Focus on climate system prediction
  • Liaise with WGOA (assim., initial., reanalysis,
    data gaps)
  • Oversee data management in modelling activities
  • Liaise with IGBP and IHDP
  • Chair J.Shukla
  • GEWEX member J.Polcher

16
WG on Observation and Assimilation
  • Coordinates synthesis of global obs. through
    analysis, reanalysis, assimilation across WCRP
  • Facilitates interaction with WMO, IOC, GCOS,
    GOOS, etc. wrt to optimization of observing
    systems
  • Coordinates information and data management
    across WCRP
  • Takes over tasks of WG on satellite matters
  • Chair K.Trenberth
  • Secretariat G.Sommeria
  • Members J.Shukla, J.Key, W.Rossow, B.Randel,
    A.Lorenc, A.Simmons, G.Duchossois, M.Manton,
    E.Harrison, CLIVAR ?
  • Space agencies? Other experts?

17
Proposal for development of global climate
products (for WGOA)
  • Systematic re-processing and coordinated
    re-analysis of all available observations
    acquired from various satellite sensors and other
    data sources since several decades
  • Would be complementary to model re-analyses in
    order to define present climate
  • Would serve as a benchmark to validate climate
    models and thus improve our ability to forecast
    climate evolution at all time scales
  • Would contribute to the development of a
    coordinated global observation strategy

18
Task Force on Seasonal Prediction
  • Determine extent to which seasonal prediction of
    global/regional climate is possible with current
    models and observations
  • Identify the current limitations of the climate
    system model and observational data sets used to
    determine seasonal predictability
  • Develop a coordinated plan for pan-WCRP climate
    system retrospective seasonal forecasting
    experiments
  • Reported to the JSC in March 2004, the next
    report in March 2005

19
Hypothesis
  • There is currently untapped seasonal
    predictability due to interactions (and memory)
    among all the elements of the climate system
    (Atmosphere-Ocean-Land-Cryosphere)
  • Condition Seasonal Predictability Needs to be
    Assessed with Respect to a Changing Climate
  • Use IPCC Class Models

20
Contributions of WCRP Projects
  • GEWEX
  • provides guidance on how to initialize land
    surface
  • proposes/implements diagnostic studies
    numerical experiments understanding land-surface
    feedbacks
  • CliC
  • provides guidance on how to initialize cryosphere
  • proposes/implements diagnostic studies
    numerical experiments
  • CLIVAR
  • provides guidance on how to initialize
    ocean-atmosphere
  • proposes/implements diagnostic studies
    numerical experiments understanding
    atmosphere-ocean coupling and variability
  • SPARC
  • provides guidance on how to prescribe atmospheric
    composition
  • provides guidance on how to initialize the
    stratosphere
  • proposes/implements diagnostic studies
    numerical experiments

21
  • Arctic Ocean Model Intercomparison Project
    (AOMIP)
  • Arctic Regional Climate Model Intercomparison
    Project (ARMIP)
  • Asian-Australian Monsoon Atmospheric GCM
    Intercomparison Project
  • Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (AMIP)
  • Atmospheric Tracer Transport Model
    Intercomparison Project (TransCom)
  • Carbon-Cycle Model Linkage Project (CCMLP)
  • Climate of the Twentieth Century Project (C20C)
  • Cloud Model Feedback Intercomparison Project
  • Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP)
  • Coupled Carbon Cycle Climate Model
    Intercomparison Project (C4MIP)
  • Dynamics of North Atlantic Models (DYNAMO)
  • Ecosystem Model-Data Intercomparison (EMDI)
  • Earth system Models of Intermediate Complexity
    (EMICs)
  • ENSO Intercomparison Project (ENSIP)
  • GEWEX Atmospheric Boundary Layer Study (GABLS)
  • GEWEX Cloud System Study (GCSS)
  • GCM-Reality Intercomparison Project for SPARC
    (GRIPS)
  • Global Land-Atmosphere Coupling Experiment
    (GLACE)
  • Global Soil Wetness Project (GSWP)

22
  • Proposed ESSP Modelling Strategy
  • Experimentation with current GCMs for
  • hindcasts and projections (IPCC),
  • assimilation and prediction of the coupled system
    on
  • seasonal to decadal time-scales
  • Improvement and validation of current GCMs used
    in 1
  • GCM components of the carbon cycle, dynamic
    vegetation,
  • tropospheric chemistry, and a range of
    biogeochemical cycles
  • Extending GCMs to include these additional
    components
  • of the Earth System in turn, as a basis for 1

WCRP WCRP IGBP WCRP/ IGBP
cryosphere, CliC
23
Proposed ESSP Modelling Strategy
  • Development of more holistic models (including
    EMICs) to
  • study the interactive aspects of the natural
  • system
  • simulate longer time-scales, e.g. Ice Age Cycle
  • compare and validate with GCMs where possible
  • Development of models of the interaction between
  • the human and natural systems based on the more
    holistic models
  • Simple models for design of the diagnosis of
  • complex coupled models

IGBP IGBP/ IHDP/ DIVERSITAS ALL
24
Time frame for COPES
  • COPES will use the 1979-2004-2009 period to
    develop reference climate data sets and advanced
    forecasting techniques. This period will be used
    for retrospective forecasts of weekly?, seasonal,
    inter-annual and decadal variations
  • The period 2010-2019 will serve as a testbed for
    real time forecasts
  • Need and use of special observing periods?
  • Defining and planning of COPES will continue and
    will be widely presented at the 2006 Global
    Change Conference which markes the WCRPs 25th
    anniversary

25
Recent and future WCRP Conferences
WOCE Final, San Antonio, 11-15 November
2002 ACSYS Final, St. Petersburg, 11-14 November
2003 CLIVAR 1st Science Conference, Baltimore,
21-25 June 2004 3rd SPARC General Assembly,
Victoria, 1-6 August 2004 1st SOLAS Open Science
Conference, 13-16 October 2004 CliC 1st Science
Conference, Beijing, 11-15 April 2005 5th GEWEX
Science Conference, Irvine, 20-24 June 2005 2nd
Global Change Conference, Beijing, October (?)
2006
26
JPS for WCRP
David Carson D/WCRP, ESSP
V. Satyan D/modelling, WGNE, WGCM, START, MP
Gilles Sommeria GEWEX, WGOA
Valery Detemmerman CLIVAR
Vladimir Ryabinin CliC, SPARC, fluxes
Ann Salini Anne Chautard
Margaret Lennon-Smith
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Current Status of Climate Change Prediction
We can produce a small number of different
predictions with no idea of how reliable they
might be
33
THE TASK (simplified, after Kevin Trenberth)
  • Take a large almost round rotating sphere 8,000
    miles (12,800 km) in diameter.
  • Surround it with a murky viscous atmosphere of
    many gases mixed with water vapour, aerosols,
    etc..
  • Tilt its axis so that it wobbles back and forth
    with respect to the source of heat and light.
  • Freeze it at both ends and roast it in the
    middle.
  • Cover most of the surface with a flowing liquid
    that sometimes freezes and which feeds vapour
    into that atmosphere as it shifts up and down to
    the rhythmic pulling of the moon and the sun.
  • Condense and freeze some of the water vapour into
    clouds of imaginative shapes, sizes and
    composition.
  • Then try to predict the future conditions of that
    system for each place over the globe.

34
The Earth System Coupling the Physical,
Biogeochemical and Human Components
35
Science
Seasonal to Decadal Forecasting
Regional Anomaly Prediction
Anthropogenic Climate Change, Detection
Attribution
Data Assimilation Techniques
Atmosphere Ocean Coupled
Tools
Operational Prediction Systems
Earth System Models
Coupled phys.-biol.-chem. Models
FGGE
TOGA
CLIVAR
GEWEX
core projects
ACSYS
CliC
SPARC
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