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91探花
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Professor Myles Allen CBE FRS

Statutory Professor

Research theme

  • Climate physics

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics
Myles.Allen@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72085,01865 (2)75895
Atmospheric Physics Clarendon Laboratory, room 109
  • About
  • Publications

A large set of potential past, present and future hydro-meteorological time series for the UK

Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Discussions Copernicus GmbH (2017)

Authors:

Benoit Guillod, RG Jones, SJ Dadson, G Coxon, Gianbattista Bussi, J Freer, AL Kay, NR Massey, SARAH Sparrow, DAVID Wallom, Allen, JW Hall

Abstract:

Hydro-meteorological extremes such as drought and heavy precipitation can have large impacts on society and the economy. With potentially increasing risks associated with such events due to climate change, properly assessing the associated impacts and uncertainties is critical for adequate adaptation. However, the application of risk-based approaches often requires large sets of extreme events, which are not commonly available. Here, we present such a large set of hydro-meteorological time series for recent past and future conditions for the United Kingdom based on weather@home2, a modelling framework consisting of a global climate model driven by observed or projected sea surface temperature and sea ice which is downscaled to 25 km over the European domain by a regional climate model. Sets of 100 time series are generated for each of (i) a historical baseline (1900–2006), (ii) five near future scenarios (2020–2049) and (ii) five far future scenarios (2070–2099). The five scenarios in each future time slice all follow the Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5 (RCP8.5) and sample the range of sea surface temperature and sea ice changes from CMIP5 models. Validation of the historical baseline highlights good performance for temperature and potential evaporation, but substantial seasonal biases in mean precipitation, which are corrected using a linear approach. For extremes in low precipitation over a long accumulation period (>3 months) and shorter duration high precipitation (1–30 days), the time series generally represents past statistics well. Future projections show small precipitation increases in winter but large decreases in summer on average, leading to an overall drying, consistently with the most recent UK climate projections (UKCP09) but larger in magnitude than the latter. Both drought and high precipitation events are projected to increase in frequency and intensity in most regions, highlighting the need for appropriate adaptation measures. Overall, the presented dataset is a useful tool for assessing the risk associated with drought and more generally with hydro-meteorological extremes in the UK.

Stakeholder perceptions of event attribution in the loss and damage debate

Climate Policy Taylor & Francis 17:4 (2017) 533-550

Authors:

Hannah R Parker, Emily Boyd, Rosalind J Cornforth, Rachel James, Friederike EL Otto, Myles R Allen

weather@home 2: validation of an improved global-regional climate modelling system

Geoscientific Model Development European Geosciences Union 10 (2017) 1849-1872

Authors:

Benoit P Guillod, Richard G Jones, Andy Bowery, Karsten Haustein, Neil R Massey, Daniel M Mitchell, Friederike EL Otto, Sarah N Sparrow, Peter Uhe, David CH Wallom, Simon Wilson, Myles R Allen

Abstract:

Extreme weather events can have large impacts on society and, in many regions, are expected to change in frequency and intensity with climate change. Owing to the relatively short observational record, climate models are useful tools as they allow for generation of a larger sample of extreme events, to attribute recent events to anthropogenic climate change, and to project changes in such events into the future. The modelling system known as weather@home, consisting of a global climate model (GCM) with a nested regional climate model (RCM) and driven by sea surface temperatures, allows one to generate a very large ensemble with the help of volunteer distributed computing. This is a key tool to understanding many aspects of extreme events. Here, a new version of the weather@home system (weather@home 2) with a higher-resolution RCM over Europe is documented and a broad validation of the climate is performed. The new model includes a more recent land-surface scheme in both GCM and RCM, where subgrid-scale land-surface heterogeneity is newly represented using tiles, and an increase in RCM resolution from 50 to 25鈥痥m. The GCM performs similarly to the previous version, with some improvements in the representation of mean climate. The European RCM temperature biases are overall reduced, in particular the warm bias over eastern Europe, but large biases remain. Precipitation is improved over the Alps in summer, with mixed changes in other regions and seasons. The model is shown to represent the main classes of regional extreme events reasonably well and shows a good sensitivity to its drivers. In particular, given the improvements in this version of the weather@home system, it is likely that more reliable statements can be made with regards to impact statements, especially at more localized scales.

Estimating Carbon Budgets for Ambitious Climate Targets

Current Climate Change Reports Springer Nature 3:1 (2017) 69-77

Authors:

H Damon Matthews, Jean-S茅bastien Landry, Antti-Ilari Partanen, Myles Allen, Michael Eby, Piers M Forster, Pierre Friedlingstein, Kirsten Zickfeld

Half a degree additional warming, prognosis and projected impacts (HAPPI): Background and experimental design

Geoscientific Model Development Copernicus Publications 10:2 (2017) 571-583

Authors:

Daniel Mitchell, Krishna AchutaRao, Myles Allen, Ingo Bethke, Urs Beyerle, Andy Ciavarella, Piers M Forster, Jan Fuglestvedt, Nathan Gillett, Karsten Haustein, William Ingram, Trond Iversen, Viatcheslav Kharin, Nicholas Klingaman, Neil Massey, Erich Fischer, Carl-Friedrich Schleussner, John Scinocca, 脴yvind Seland, Hideo Shiogama, Emily Shuckburgh, Sarah Sparrow, Da铆th铆 Stone, Peter Uhe, David Wallom, Michael Wehner, Rashyd Zaaboul

Abstract:

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has accepted the invitation from the UNFCCC to provide a special report on the impacts of global warming of 1.5掳C above pre-industrial levels and on related global greenhouse gas emission pathways. Many current experiments in, for 5 example, the Coupled Model Inter-comparison Project (CMIP), are not specifically designed for informing this report. Here, we document the design of the Half a degree Additional warming, Projections, Prognosis and Impacts (HAPPI) experiment. HAPPI provides a framework for the generation of climate data describing how the climate, and in particular extreme weather, might differ from the present day in worlds that are 1.5掳C and 2.0掳C warmer than pre-industrial conditions. Output from 10 participating climate models includes variables frequently used by a range of impact models. The key challenge is to separate the impact of an additional approximately half degree of warming from uncertainty in climate model responses and internal climate variability that dominate CMIP-style experiments under low emission scenarios.


Large ensembles of simulations (>50 members) of atmosphere-only models for three time slices 15 are proposed, each a decade in length; the first being the most recent observed 10-year period (2006- 2015), the second two being estimates of the a similar decade but under 1.5 and 2掳C conditions a century in the future. We use the Representative Concentration Pathway 2.6 (RCP2.6) to provide the model boundary conditions for the 1.5掳C scenario, and a weighted combination of RCP2.6 and RCP4.5 for the 2掳C scenario.

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