cmug climate modelling user group roger saunders met office hadley centre

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CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

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Page 1: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

CMUGClimate Modelling User Group

Roger SaundersMet Office Hadley Centre

Page 2: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

Overview and Meeting Aims

• Some key points from climate modelling perspective

• Meeting aims

• Inputs and outputs

• Wider perspective

Page 3: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

Met Office Hadley CentreClimate Modelling

NWPHadGEM3, FOAM, HadSST

ECMWFReanalyses

NWPIFS (ERA-Interim)

MACC

MPI-HamburgClimate Modelling

MPI-M/ESM, JSBACH

MétéoFranceClimate Modelling

NWPArpege, MERCATORCNRM-CM, MOCAGE

Climate Modellers

Reanalyses

Sea-ice

Sea-level

Sea surface temperature

Ocean Colour

Glaciers and ice caps

Land Cover

Fire disturbance

Cloud properties

Ozone

Aerosols

Greenhouse Gases

CMUG is here to facilitate

Page 4: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

CMUG folks here

ECMWFIFS, ERA, MACC

Dick Dee

MPI-MeteorologyECHAM, JSBACH

MétéoFranceArpege, MOCAGE, CNRM-CM, Mercator

Met Office Hadley CentreHadGEM, FOAM, HadISST

Thierry Phulpin

Paul Van Der Linden

Alex Loew Serge PlantonDavid Tan

Roger Saunders Mark Ringer

Silvia Kloster Stefan Kinne

Iryna Khlystova

X

X

Page 5: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

Issues for climate modelling

• Higher resolution (horiz, vertical, time)• Regional climate prediction (e.g. UKCP)• More physical processes• Seasonal to decadal prediction• Use of reanalyses for climate• Seamless prediction - weather prediction to climate

change using same model

• Metrics developed to evaluate models – CCI datasets can help here

• The way we use observational data is evolving

Page 6: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

Climate monitoring and attribution

Different groups can produce defensible, but statistically inconsistent estimates of trends. Need for better error characterisation

Page 7: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

Error characterisation of CDRs

• An estimate of the errors for each CDR produced is essential for use in climate applications

• The types of errors recently defined by GCOS • Accuracy: The rms difference between the single or averaged values

of a variable and the truth. • Stability: The extent to which accuracy of a time average remains

constant over a longer time period (e.g., annual average relative to decadal average).

• The importance of specifying each depends on the application

• Errors should be specified on a FOV basis. Aggregated error estimates are not sufficient

• Single sensor products are simpler than merged products• Error correlations are also important to document

Page 8: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

Use of observations evolving..

• Forward modelling of measured quantities (radiances, skin SST, radar reflectivities) rather than high-level products (profile retrievals, bulk SST, cloud properties)

• Ensures more direct comparison of equivalent model variable with observations

• This was the key for use of ISCCP clouds

Observationsimulator

Page 9: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

HadGEM1 (MO) MMF 4km (CSU) CloudSat

MMF 1km (CSU)LMDZ (CNRS) dBZ>-25

(Bodas-Salcedo et al., submitted to BAMS)

Multi-model analysis using satellite simulators

Page 10: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

Implications for requirements

• The new ECV datasets must have added value over existing ones and future proof for model evolutions

• Datasets should have global coverage and for some applications >15 years

• Be clear about applications for specific dataset as this drives the required accuracy:

• Climate trend monitoring high stability and accuracy• Change detection high stability• Evaluate processes in model high accuracy• Model validation high stability and accuracy • Assimilation high accuracy (and stability)

• Uncertainty estimates are as important as product itself for all applications. Correlation of errors in space/time also important

Page 11: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

Validation of SST

Coverage of buoys

Buoy validation of ARC SST

But what about ocean colour?

Page 12: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

Meeting Aims

• Check ECV project URDs are consistent with the needs of Climate Research Groups and GCOS requirements, including source traceability

• Allow ECV teams to explain how their projects address the integrated perspective for consistency between the ECVs to avoid gaps

• Start review of product specifications

• Discuss how to deal with uncertainties in products

• Finalise the ECV projects data needs for ECMWF reanalysis data

• Start a discussion on ECV data set validation

• Maintain oversight of the position within the international framework in which CMUG/CCI is operating

Page 13: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

URDs: Common Issues

CMUG report on CCI URDs D2.1:

• Define period of TCDRs (1 month-30 years?)

• Clear specification of requirements for which application

• Some ECVs need clearer error specifications

• Merged vs single sensor products

• More interaction with climate modellers in some cases

• Consideration of model simulators where required

• Consistency between ECVs

Page 14: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

Integrated view of ECVs

1. Through ensuring common input datasets are used for CDR creation and in some cases common pre-processing (e.g. geolocation, land/sea mask, cloud detection)

2. Through comparisons of CDRs for different ECVs (e.g. SST, sea-level, sea-ice and ocean colour)

3. Through comparisons of CDRs with model fields (e.g. GHG and Ozone CDRs and MACC model profiles/total column amounts) CMUG will be involved in development of some observation simulators. Pre-cursors of ECVs will be used for preparation.

4. Through studying teleconnections (e.g. El-Nino SST shows consistent impact on cloud fields, fires).

5. Through assimilation of CDRs and to assess impact on analyses and predictions (e.g. SST in ERA-Interim)

Page 15: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

Outputs from meeting

• Meeting report of actions agreed by ECV projects [including updates to URDs and Product Spec. docs]

• Meeting report describing strategic position of the CMUG, within CCI, in the international arena

• Material to inform revision of CMUG reports

• Clarity on requests for ECMWF reanalysis data

• Clarity on early demonstration of products (if feasible) to modellers.

Page 16: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

Related Activities

1. GCOS, GSICS (Jan/Feb 2011)2. EUMETSAT CAF/CMSAF and SCOPE-CM3. NOAA-NASA initiatives (e.g. JPL CMIP5)4. WCRP Observation and Assimilation Panel (Apr 11)5. Reanalyses (ERACLIM, JRA-55, EURO4M) 6. Coupled Model Intercomparison Project and

follow-on activities (Exeter, June 11)7. Inputs to IPCC AR-5/6 (interaction with authors)8. EU IS-ENES, METAFOR, …9. EU GMES (MACC, MyOcean, Climate, ….)

Page 17: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

We don’t want to leaveour climate researchscientists like this!

But like this!

Page 18: CMUG Climate Modelling User Group Roger Saunders Met Office Hadley Centre

Any questions?

Please visitwww.cci-cmug.org

[email protected]