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Testing Downscaled Climate Projections: Is Past Performance an Indicator of Future Accuracy?

Expanding a Standardized Framework for the Evaluation and Intercomparison of Statistically Downscaled Climate Projections
Principal Investigator
John Lanzante

Dates

Start Date
2013-09-29
End Date
2016-09-24
Release Date
2013

Summary

When climate models are developed, researchers test how well they replicate the climate system by using them to model past climate. Ideally, the model output will match the climate conditions that were actually recorded in the past, indicating that the model correctly characterizes how the climate system works and can be used to reliably project future conditions. However, this approach assumes that models that reliably project past climate conditions will accurately predict future climate conditions, even though the climate system might have changed. This research contributes to generating more reliable local-scale climate projections by testing the assumption that the climatological relationships which existed in the past will [...]

Child Items (4)

Contacts

Principal Investigator :
John Lanzante
Co-Investigator :
Anne Stoner, Keith Dixon, Venkatramani Balaji
Cooperator/Partner :
Carlos Gaitán
Funding Agency :
South Central CSC
CMS Group :
Climate Adaptation Science Centers (CASC) Program

Attached Files

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Sky_NM_ToniKlemm.jpg
“Sky in New Mexico - Credit: Toni Klemm”
thumbnail 602.69 KB image/jpeg

Purpose

This work seeks to improve the ability to generate climate change information that can be used by planners, policymakers, scientists, or the public to study the impacts of climate change at the local level (e.g. a town or a small geographic region). Developing relationships between observed weather elements (such as temperature or precipitation) and projections produced by computer climate models is one of the most common ways to generate this information. However, such an approach assumes that relationships derived during the past will be valid in the future, after climate has changed. Using conventional wisdom, one would have to wait decades to determine to what extent this assumption is valid. This research uses a novel approach in which researchers substitute certain climate model projections for future "observations" to test this assumption. Current findings suggest that the assumption does hold reasonably well in many cases, but there are instances (for example particular geographical locations, such as coastal regions, and times of year, especially summer) when this assumption is not as robust. This research further explores under what conditions the assumption degrades, and develops ways to make the methods that generate local information about climate change more reliable.

Project Extension

projectStatusCompleted

Budget Extension

annualBudgets
year2013
totalFunds124393.0
totalFunds124393.0

Sky in New Mexico - Credit: Toni Klemm
Sky in New Mexico - Credit: Toni Klemm

Map

Spatial Services

ScienceBase WMS

Communities

  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • South Central CASC

Associated Items

Tags

Provenance

rfpManager-1.68

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
RegistrationUUID NCCWSC c8ef0000-f463-403e-ad72-14a5bca12cdd
StampID NCCWSC SC13-LJ1138

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