Publication | Open Access
Attribution of extreme weather and climate events overestimated by unreliable climate simulations
95
Citations
29
References
2016
Year
EngineeringExtreme WeatherClimate ModelingEarth ScienceProbabilistic ForecastingEvent AttributionUncertainty QuantificationManagementClimate ProjectionUnreliable Climate SimulationsStatisticsClimate ForecastingClimate ChangeMeteorologyGeographyWeather DisasterAbstract Event AttributionForecastingClimatologyClimate EventClimate RiskClimate ModellingClimate Events
Abstract Event attribution aims to estimate the role of an external driver after the occurrence of an extreme weather and climate event by comparing the probability that the event occurs in two counterfactual worlds. These probabilities are typically computed using ensembles of climate simulations whose simulated probabilities are known to be imperfect. The implications of using imperfect models in this context are largely unknown, limited by the number of observed extreme events in the past to conduct a robust evaluation. Using an idealized framework, this model limitation is studied by generating large number of simulations with variable reliability in simulated probability. The framework illustrates that unreliable climate simulations are prone to overestimate the attributable risk to climate change. Climate model ensembles tend to be overconfident in their representation of the climate variability which leads to systematic increase in the attributable risk to an extreme event. Our results suggest that event attribution approaches comprising of a single climate model would benefit from ensemble calibration in order to account for model inadequacies similarly as operational forecasting systems.
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