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Juan C. Acosta Navarro
,
Pablo Ortega
,
Javier García-Serrano
,
Virginie Guemas
,
Etienne Tourigny
,
Rubén Cruz-García
,
François Massonnet
, and
Francisco J. Doblas-Reyes
Full access
Alexander J. Baker
,
Malcolm J. Roberts
,
Pier Luigi Vidale
,
Kevin I. Hodges
,
Jon Seddon
,
Benoît Vannière
,
Rein J. Haarsma
,
Reinhard Schiemann
,
Dimitris Kapetanakis
,
Etienne Tourigny
,
Katja Lohmann
,
Christopher D. Roberts
, and
Laurent Terray

Abstract

Tropical cyclones undergo extratropical transition (ET) in every ocean basin. Projected changes in ET frequency under climate change are uncertain and differ between basins, so multimodel studies are required to establish confidence. We used a feature-tracking algorithm to identify tropical cyclones and performed cyclone phase-space analysis to identify ET in an ensemble of atmosphere-only and fully coupled global model simulations, run at various resolutions under historical (1950–2014) and future (2015–50) forcing. Historical simulations were evaluated against five reanalyses for 1979–2018. Considering ET globally, ensemble-mean biases in track and genesis densities are reduced in the North Atlantic and western North Pacific when horizontal resolution is increased from ∼100 to ∼25 km. At high resolution, multi-reanalysis-mean climatological ET frequencies across most ocean basins as well as basins’ seasonal cycles are reproduced better than in low-resolution models. Skill in simulating historical ET interannual variability in the North Atlantic and western North Pacific is ∼0.3, which is lower than for all tropical cyclones. Models project an increase in ET frequency in the North Atlantic and a decrease in the western North Pacific. We explain these opposing responses by secular change in ET seasonality and an increase in lower-tropospheric, pre-ET warm-core strength, both of which are largely unique to the North Atlantic. Multimodel consensus about climate change responses is clearer for frequency metrics than for intensity metrics. These results help clarify the role of model resolution in simulating ET and help quantify uncertainty surrounding ET in a warming climate.

Open access
Leon Hermanson
,
Doug Smith
,
Melissa Seabrook
,
Roberto Bilbao
,
Francisco Doblas-Reyes
,
Etienne Tourigny
,
Vladimir Lapin
,
Viatcheslav V. Kharin
,
William J. Merryfield
,
Reinel Sospedra-Alfonso
,
Panos Athanasiadis
,
Dario Nicoli
,
Silvio Gualdi
,
Nick Dunstone
,
Rosie Eade
,
Adam Scaife
,
Mark Collier
,
Terence O’Kane
,
Vassili Kitsios
,
Paul Sandery
,
Klaus Pankatz
,
Barbara Früh
,
Holger Pohlmann
,
Wolfgang Müller
,
Takahito Kataoka
,
Hiroaki Tatebe
,
Masayoshi Ishii
,
Yukiko Imada
,
Tim Kruschke
,
Torben Koenigk
,
Mehdi Pasha Karami
,
Shuting Yang
,
Tian Tian
,
Liping Zhang
,
Tom Delworth
,
Xiaosong Yang
,
Fanrong Zeng
,
Yiguo Wang
,
François Counillon
,
Noel Keenlyside
,
Ingo Bethke
,
Judith Lean
,
Jürg Luterbacher
,
Rupa Kumar Kolli
, and
Arun Kumar

Abstract

As climate change accelerates, societies and climate-sensitive socioeconomic sectors cannot continue to rely on the past as a guide to possible future climate hazards. Operational decadal predictions offer the potential to inform current adaptation and increase resilience by filling the important gap between seasonal forecasts and climate projections. The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) has recognized this and in 2017 established the WMO Lead Centre for Annual to Decadal Climate Predictions (shortened to “Lead Centre” below), which annually provides a large multimodel ensemble of predictions covering the next 5 years. This international collaboration produces a prediction that is more skillful and useful than any single center can achieve. One of the main outputs of the Lead Centre is the Global Annual to Decadal Climate Update (GADCU), a consensus forecast based on these predictions. This update includes maps showing key variables, discussion on forecast skill, and predictions of climate indices such as the global mean near-surface temperature and Atlantic multidecadal variability. it also estimates the probability of the global mean temperature exceeding 1.5°C above preindustrial levels for at least 1 year in the next 5 years, which helps policy-makers understand how closely the world is approaching this goal of the Paris Agreement. This paper, written by the authors of the GADCU, introduces the GADCU, presents its key outputs, and briefly discusses its role in providing vital climate information for society now and in the future.

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