Understanding the cause-and-effect relationship between global warming
and record-breaking weather requires asking precisely the right
questions.
Extreme climate and weather events such as record high temperatures,
intense downpours and severe storm surges are becoming more common in
many parts of the world. But because high-quality weather records go
back only about 100 years, most scientists have been reluctant to say if
global warming affected particular extreme events.
On Wednesday, Dec. 17, at the American Geophysical Union's Fall
Meeting in San Francisco, Noah Diffenbaugh, an associate professor of
environmental Earth system science at the Stanford School of Earth
Sciences, will discuss approaches to this challenge in a talk titled
"Quantifying the Influence of Observed Global Warming on the Probability
of Unprecedented Extreme Climate Events." He will focus on weather
events that -- at the time they occur -- are more extreme than any other
event in the historical record.
Diffenbaugh emphasizes that asking precisely the right question is critical for finding the correct answer.
"The media are often focused on whether global warming caused a
particular event," said Diffenbaugh, who is a senior fellow at the
Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment. "The more useful question
for real-world decisions is: 'Is the probability of a particular event
statistically different now compared with a climate without human
influence?'"
Diffenbaugh said the research requires three elements: a long record
of climate observations; a large collection of climate model experiments
that accurately simulate the observed variations in climate; and
advanced statistical techniques to analyze both the observations and the
climate models.
One research challenge involves having just a few decades or a
century of high-quality weather data with which to make sense of events
that might occur once every 1,000 or 10,000 years in a theoretical
climate without human influence.
But decision makers need to appreciate the influence of global warming on extreme climate and weather events.
"If we look over the last decade in the United States, there have
been more than 70 events that have each caused at least $1 billion in
damage, and a number of those have been considerably more costly," said
Diffenbaugh. "Understanding whether the probability of those high-impact
events has changed can help us to plan for future extreme events, and
to value the costs and benefits of avoiding future global warming."
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