DKT-12-61
https://doi.org/10.5194/dkt-12-61
12. Deutsche Klimatagung
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Assessing mean climate change signals in the global CORDEX-CORE ensemble

Claas Teichmann1, Daniela Jacob1, Armelle Reca Remedio1, Thomas Remke1, Lars Buntemeyer1, Peter Hoffmann1, Arne Kriegsmann, Ludwig Lierhammer1, Katharina Bülow1, Torsten Weber1, Kevin Sieck1, Diana Rechid1, Gaby S. Langendijk1, Erika Coppola2, and the further members of the CORDEX-CORE team*
Claas Teichmann et al.
  • 1Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht, Climate Service Center Germany (GERICS), Hamburg, Germany (claas.teichmann@hzg.de)
  • 2The Abdus Salam International Center for Theoretical Physics (ICTP), strada costiera 11, 34135 Trieste, Italy
  • *A full list of authors appears at the end of the abstract

The Coordinated Output for Regional Evaluations (CORE) simulation ensemble is an effort of the WCRP CORDEX community to provide high resolution regional climate change information for the major inhabited areas of the world and thus to generate the solid scientific basis for further research related to vulnerability, impact, adaptation and climate services (VIACS). This is especially important in those areas in which so far only few high-resolution simulations or only global comparatively coarse simulations were available. The driving simulations were selected to cover the spread of high, medium and low climate sensitivity at a global scale. Initially, the two RCMs REMO and RegCM4 were used to downscale these data global climate model output to a resolution of 0.22° (about 25km) while it is intended that the CORDEX CORE ensemble can then be extended by additional regional simulations to further increase the ensemble size and thus the representation of possible future climate change pathways.

The aim of this study is to investigate and document the climate change information provided by the current CORDEX CORE ensemble with respect to mean climate change in different regions and in comparison to previously existing global climate information, especially those global climate simulations used as boundary forcing for CORDEX CORE, but also in comparison to the entire AR5-GCM ensemble. The analysis focuses on the representation of the AR5-GCM range of climate change signals by the CORDEX CORE ensemble with respect to mean temperature and precipitation changes and corresponding shifts in the annual cycles in the new AR6 IPCC physical reference regions. This also provides an indication for CORDEX CORE suitability for VIACS applications in each region.

further members of the CORDEX-CORE team:

Filippo Giorgi James Ciarlo Francesca Raffaele Graziano Giuliani Gao Xuejie Taleena Rae Sines Jose Abraham Torres Alavez Sushant Das Fabio di Sante Emanuela Pichelli Russel Glazer Moetasim Ashfaq Melissa Bukovsky Eun-Soon Im

How to cite: Teichmann, C., Jacob, D., Remedio, A. R., Remke, T., Buntemeyer, L., Hoffmann, P., Kriegsmann, A., Lierhammer, L., Bülow, K., Weber, T., Sieck, K., Rechid, D., Langendijk, G. S., and Coppola, E. and the further members of the CORDEX-CORE team: Assessing mean climate change signals in the global CORDEX-CORE ensemble, 12. Deutsche Klimatagung, online, 15–18 Mar 2021, DKT-12-61, https://doi.org/10.5194/dkt-12-61, 2021.