EMS Annual Meeting Abstracts
Vol. 18, EMS2021-377, 2021
https://doi.org/10.5194/ems2021-377
EMS Annual Meeting 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Winter extreme weather in EURO-CORDEX climate models and their links to large-scale atmospheric circulation

Eva Plavcová1, Ondřej Lhotka1,2, and Jan Stryhal1
Eva Plavcová et al.
  • 1Institute of Atmospheric Physics CAS, Prague, Czechia (plavcova@ufa.cas.cz)
  • 2Global Change Research Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Brno, Czech Republic

Regional Climate Models (RCMs) are powerful tools to study changes in the climate system on the regional scale. However, the reliability of their simulations has been considerably limited by the longstanding issue that climate models often fail to reproduce various aspects of the historical climate. In our study, we analyse how RCMs from the EURO-CORDEX project are able to reproduce extreme winter weather. We analyse temporal and spatial characteristics of extreme wind gust, extremely cold temperature, and extreme precipitation. Model outputs are validated against observed data from the European gridded observational database (EOBS) and the novel ERA5 reanalysis. We focus on the Central European domain (defined between 48–52°N and 10–19°E) over the 1979 – 2017 period. We investigate a set of 9 simulations of 3 different RCMs driven by 3 different global climate models which allow us to analyse the influence of driving data on the RCM’s performance. Since local climate elements are relatively tightly linked to a large-scale atmospheric circulation over Europe in winter, we also evaluate the ability of RCMs to reproduce the atmospheric circulation and its links to selected high-impact winter weather in detail. We use the classification of circulation based on the method of Sammon mapping. Investigation of these links can lead to better physical understanding of the climate and to the identification of inadequacies in simulated characteristics of the studied events. All of this is an important step forward in further improving the models and enhancing the credibility of climate change scenarios based on climate model simulations.

How to cite: Plavcová, E., Lhotka, O., and Stryhal, J.: Winter extreme weather in EURO-CORDEX climate models and their links to large-scale atmospheric circulation, EMS Annual Meeting 2021, online, 6–10 Sep 2021, EMS2021-377, https://doi.org/10.5194/ems2021-377, 2021.

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