Mapping climate change in European temperature distributions
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/6032Date
2013Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Climate change poses challenges for decision makers across society, not just in preparing for
the climate of the future but even when planning for the climate of the present day. When
making climate sensitive decisions, policy makers and adaptation planners would benefit from
information on local scales and for user-specific quantiles (e.g. the hottest/coldest 5% of days)
and thresholds (e.g. days above 28 C), not just mean changes. Here, we translate observations
of weather into observations of climate change, providing maps of the changing shape of
climatic temperature distributions across Europe since 1950. The provision of such
information from observations is valuable to support decisions designed to be robust in today’s
climate, while also providing data against which climate forecasting methods can be judged
and interpreted. The general statement that the hottest summer days are warming faster than
the coolest is made decision relevant by exposing how the regions of greatest warming are
quantile and threshold dependent. In a band from Northern France to Denmark, where the
response is greatest, the hottest days in the temperature distribution have seen changes of at
least 2 C, over four times the global mean change over the same period. In winter the coldest
nights are warming fastest, particularly in Scandinavia.
Publisher
IOP PublishingCitation
Environmental Research Letters 8(2013) nr. 3 s. -Metadata
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