NCAR News - Intensive Hurricane Study Launched
The National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), working with federal agencies and universities as well as the insurance and energy industries, has launched an intensive study to examine how global warming will influence hurricanes in the next few decades. The goal of the project is to better inform coastal communities, offshore drilling operations, and other interests that could be affected by changes in hurricanes.
2008-24 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: October 8, 2008
Hurricanes and Climate Change: NCAR Launches Intensive Study into
Future Hurricane Risk
Contacts:
David Hosansky, NCAR/UCAR Media Relations
303-497-8611
hosansky@ucar.edu
Rachael Drummond, NCAR/UCAR Media Relations
303-497-8604
rachaeld@ucar.edu
For scientific contact, see below.
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Note to editors:
For a graphic illustrating the use of computer models for this research, see
www.ucar.edu/news/releases/2008/hurricanemodel.jsp
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BOULDER -- The National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR),
working with
federal agencies and universities as well as the insurance and
energy industries, has launched an intensive study to examine how
global warming will influence hurricanes in the next few decades.
The goal of the project is to better inform coastal communities,
offshore drilling operations, and other interests that could be
affected by changes in hurricanes.
The project will use a combination of global climate and regional
weather models, run on one of the world's most powerful
supercomputers, to look at future hurricane activity in unprecedented detail. Researchers are
targeting the hurricane-prone Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea
to assess the likely changes, between now and the middle of the
century, in the frequency, intensity, and paths of these powerful
storms. Initial results are expected early next year.
"It is clear from the impacts of recent hurricane activity that we
urgently need to learn more about how hurricane intensity and
behavior may respond to a warming climate," says NCAR scientist
Greg Holland, who is leading the project. "The increasingly dense
development along our coastlines and our dependence on oil from the
Gulf of Mexico leave our society dangerously vulnerable to
hurricanes."
The new study follows two major reports, by the U.S. Climate Change
Science Program (CCSP) and Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC), that found evidence for a link between global
warming and hurricane activity. But many questions remain about
future hurricanes. For example, the CCSP report concluded that
future changes in frequency were uncertain and that rainfall and
intensity were likely to increase, but with unknown
consequences.
Improved understanding of climate change and hurricanes is an
especially high priority for the energy industry, which has a
concentration of drilling platforms, refineries, pipelines, and
other infrastructure in a region that is vulnerable to severe
weather. Hurricanes Gustav and Ike damaged offshore oil production
and several refineries, disrupting gasoline supplies.
The project is part of a larger effort examining regional climate
change between 1995 and 2055. The simulations are being run on
NCAR's bluefire supercomputer with support from the National
Science Foundation, NCAR's sponsor, and through a long-term
collaboration with the insurance industry through the Willis
Research Network. Additional backing is expected from the Research
Partnership to Secure Energy for America, a nonprofit consortium
that includes the U.S. Department of Energy and several energy
companies. The Georgia Institute of Technology is collaborating on
the research, and other universities are also involved.
"This research program by NCAR is a major contribution to the
insurance industry and public policymakers," says Rowan Douglas,
managing director of Willis. "The primary way to improve our
understanding of present and future hurricane risk is to generate
computer simulations of storms in unprecedented detail. NCAR's work
is at the forefront of this critical line of research, helping
those with onshore and offshore risks in the Gulf, and with
relevance to all affected by tropical cyclones in the United States
and worldwide."
--The research plan---
For this new NCAR project, researchers will examine three decades
in detail: 1995-2005, 2020-2030, and 2045-2055. They will use
statistical techniques to fill in the gaps between these decades. A
major goal is to examine how several decades of greenhouse-gas
buildup could affect regional climate and, in turn, influence
hurricanes and other critical weather features. The team will also
investigate the impact of the powerful storms on global
climate.
One of the most difficult technical challenges for such a project
is to create a model that can capture both the climate of the
entire world and the behavior of a single hurricane. Models
simulate weather conditions at thousands of points in a
three-dimensional grid that represents the atmosphere. If the
points are spaced far apart, as in a coarse-resolution global
climate model, the model will run more quickly on a supercomputer
but it cannot simulate a hurricane in realistic detail. Conversely,
a high-resolution regional weather model can simulate a hurricane
with a core that is just a few miles across, but it may not
correctly include factors driven by global-scale warming that could
affect hurricane formation, such as changes in wind shear and
atmospheric stability.
To get around these roadblocks, NCAR scientists are integrating two
of the center's leading models into the Nested Regional Climate
Model (NRCM). They nest a special version of their high-resolution
weather model (the Weather Research and Forecasting model, or WRF)
inside a lower-resolution, global climate model (the Community
Climate System Model, or CCSM).
The resulting simulations show fine-scale detail for certain
regions, like the Gulf of Mexico, while also incorporating global
climate patterns. For each of its decade-long time slices, the
NRCM's resolution will be about 20 miles across Africa, Europe, and
the South Atlantic; 7.5 miles across the tropical Atlantic and
northeastern United States; and an even sharper 2.5 miles over the
Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico, southeastern United States, and the
drought-prone western United States.
"Combining weather and climate models in this way enables more
detailed projections of hurricanes in a warming world than any
study to date," says Holland. "These projections will help reduce
the uncertainty of current assessments, and they also give us
experience in predicting changes to other high-impact weather
systems."
With its considerable requirements, the project is putting months
of intense demand on bluefire, NCAR's flagship supercomputer.
Manufactured by IBM, it is ranked as one of the 30 most powerful
computers on Earth and can solve up to 76 trillion equations every
second.
"The NRCM is one of the most intensive computer simulations we have
witnessed at NCAR," says Tom Bettge, director of operations and
services for NCAR's Computational and Information Systems
Laboratory. "As we evaluate future North American climate in
increasing detail, we will look to even bigger and faster
high-performance computers."
The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research manages the
National Center for Atmospheric Research under sponsorship by the
National Science Foundation. Any opinions, findings and
conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are
those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of
the National Science Foundation.
-The End-
Scientific contact:
Greg Holland, NCAR
303-497-8949
gholland@ucar.edu
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