TY - JOUR
T1 - Human influence on European winter wind storms such as those of January 2018
AU - Vautard, Robert
AU - van Oldenborgh, Geert Jan
AU - Otto, Friederike E.L.
AU - Yiou, Pascal
AU - de Vries, Hylke
AU - van Meijgaard, Erik
AU - Stepek, Andrew
AU - Soubeyroux, Jean Michel
AU - Philip, Sjoukje
AU - Kew, Sarah F.
AU - Costella, Cecilia
AU - Singh, Roop
AU - Tebaldi, Claudia
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgements. This work was supported by the EU-PHEME project, which is part of ERA4CS, an ERA-NET initiated by JPI Climate and co-funded by the European Union (grant no. 690462). It was also supported by the French Ministry for an Ecological and Solidary Transition through national convention on climate services and ERC grant no. 338965-A2C2. We would like to thank all volunteers who have donated their computing time to weather@home. The work was initially published by the same authors on the World Weather Attribution web site: https: //www.worldweatherattribution.org/ (last access: 16 March 2018) as a “rapid attribution study”, and this article is taking most of the material from this analysis and refined it.
Publisher Copyright:
© Author(s) 2019..
PY - 2019/4/25
Y1 - 2019/4/25
N2 - Several major storms pounded western Europe in January 2018, generating large damages and casualties. The two most impactful ones, Eleanor and Friederike, are analysed here in the context of climate change. Near surface wind speed station observations exhibit a decreasing trend in the frequency of strong winds associated with such storms. High-resolution regional climate models, on the other hand, show no trend up to now and a small increase in storminess in future due to climate change. This shows that factors other than climate change, which are not in the climate models, caused the observed decline in storminess over land. A large part is probably due to increases in surface roughness, as shown for a small set of stations covering the Netherlands and in previous studies. This observed trend could therefore be independent from climate evolution. We concluded that human-induced climate change has had so far no significant influence on storms like the two mentioned. However, all simulations indicate that global warming could lead to a marginal increase (0 %-20 %) in the probability of extreme hourly winds until the middle of the century, consistent with previous modelling studies. This excludes other factors, such as surface roughness, aerosols, and decadal variability, which have up to now caused a much larger negative trend. Until these factors are correctly simulated by climate models, we cannot give credible projections of future storminess over land in Europe.
AB - Several major storms pounded western Europe in January 2018, generating large damages and casualties. The two most impactful ones, Eleanor and Friederike, are analysed here in the context of climate change. Near surface wind speed station observations exhibit a decreasing trend in the frequency of strong winds associated with such storms. High-resolution regional climate models, on the other hand, show no trend up to now and a small increase in storminess in future due to climate change. This shows that factors other than climate change, which are not in the climate models, caused the observed decline in storminess over land. A large part is probably due to increases in surface roughness, as shown for a small set of stations covering the Netherlands and in previous studies. This observed trend could therefore be independent from climate evolution. We concluded that human-induced climate change has had so far no significant influence on storms like the two mentioned. However, all simulations indicate that global warming could lead to a marginal increase (0 %-20 %) in the probability of extreme hourly winds until the middle of the century, consistent with previous modelling studies. This excludes other factors, such as surface roughness, aerosols, and decadal variability, which have up to now caused a much larger negative trend. Until these factors are correctly simulated by climate models, we cannot give credible projections of future storminess over land in Europe.
KW - ITC-CV
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85064955773&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5194/esd-10-271-2019
DO - 10.5194/esd-10-271-2019
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85064955773
SN - 2190-4979
VL - 10
SP - 271
EP - 286
JO - Earth System Dynamics
JF - Earth System Dynamics
IS - 2
ER -