Attribution of Weather and Climate Events

被引:100
|
作者
Otto, Friederike E. L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oxford, Environm Change Inst, Oxford OX1 3QY, England
关键词
extreme weather; risk assessment; probabilistic event attribution; EXPLAINING EXTREME EVENTS; PRECIPITATION EXTREMES; FLOOD RISK; TEMPERATURE; ENGLAND; CMIP5;
D O I
10.1146/annurev-environ-102016-060847
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Within the past decade, the attribution of extreme weather and climate events has emerged from a theoretical possibility into a subfield of climate science in its own right, providing scientific evidence on the role of anthropogenic climate change in individual extreme weather events, on a regular basis and using a range of approaches. Different approaches and thus different framings of the attribution question lead to very different assessments of the role of human-induced climate change. Although there is no right or wrong approach, the community is currently debating about the appropriate methodologies for addressing various stakeholder needs and scientific limitations. Tackling these limitations with more thorough model evaluation and meaningful bias corrections as well as going beyond the meteorological hazard and attributing the full impacts of extreme weather are the main challenges to face in the coming years.
引用
收藏
页码:627 / 646
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Attribution of extreme weather and climate-related events
    Stott, Peter A.
    Christidis, Nikolaos
    Otto, Friederike E. L.
    Sun, Ying
    Vanderlinden, Jean-Paul
    van Oldenborgh, Geert Jan
    Vautard, Robert
    von Storch, Hans
    Walton, Peter
    Yiou, Pascal
    Zwiers, Francis W.
    [J]. WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE, 2016, 7 (01) : 23 - 41
  • [2] Extreme weather events and the politics of climate change attribution
    Hai, Zuhad
    Perlman, Rebecca L.
    [J]. SCIENCE ADVANCES, 2022, 8 (36)
  • [3] Attribution of extreme weather and climate events overestimated by unreliable climate simulations
    Bellprat, Omar
    Doblas-Reyes, Francisco
    [J]. GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2016, 43 (05) : 2158 - 2164
  • [4] Attribution of extreme weather events: how does climate change affect weather?
    Otto, Friederike
    [J]. WEATHER, 2019, 74 (09) : 325 - 326
  • [5] On the attribution of the impacts of extreme weather events to anthropogenic climate change
    Perkins-Kirkpatrick, S. E.
    Stone, D. A.
    Mitchell, D. M.
    Rosier, S.
    King, A. D.
    Lo, Y. T. E.
    Pastor-Paz, J.
    Frame, D.
    Wehner, M.
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2022, 17 (02)
  • [6] CAUSAL COUNTERFACTUAL THEORY FOR THE ATTRIBUTION OF WEATHER AND CLIMATE-RELATED EVENTS
    Hannart, A.
    Pearl, J.
    Otto, F. E. L.
    Naveau, P.
    Ghil, M.
    [J]. BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2016, 97 (01) : 99 - 110
  • [7] Tighten attribution of weather events
    Sutton, Rowan
    [J]. NATURE, 2018, 561 (7722) : 177 - 177
  • [8] DADA: data assimilation for the detection and attribution of weather and climate-related events
    A. Hannart
    A. Carrassi
    M. Bocquet
    M. Ghil
    P. Naveau
    M. Pulido
    J. Ruiz
    P. Tandeo
    [J]. Climatic Change, 2016, 136 : 155 - 174
  • [9] DADA: data assimilation for the detection and attribution of weather and climate-related events
    Hannart, A.
    Carrassi, A.
    Bocquet, M.
    Ghil, M.
    Naveau, P.
    Pulido, M.
    Ruiz, J.
    Tandeo, P.
    [J]. CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2016, 136 (02) : 155 - 174
  • [10] CLIMATE CHANGE Attribution of extreme weather
    Otto, Friederike E. L.
    [J]. NATURE GEOSCIENCE, 2015, 8 (08) : 581 - 582