Friday, June 14, 2013

New paper finds 2012 Great Plains drought was within natural variability

A paper published today in Geophysical Research Letters finds the 2012 extreme Great Plains drought was within the natural variability of climate and that there is no evidence of a link to AGW. According to the authors, "it is concluded that the extreme Great Plains drought did not require extreme external forcings [i.e. greenhouse gases], and could plausibly have arisen from atmospheric noise [natural variability] alone." The four authors hail from different divisions of NOAA, which is a 'denier' according to James Hansen.

Do Extreme Climate Events Require Extreme Forcings?

Arun Kumar, Mingyue Chen, Martin Hoerling, Jon Eischeid

Abstract:  The question whether extreme climate events require extreme forcings is assessed for the severe Great Plains drought during May-July (MJJ) 2012. This drought event had a rapid onset, and little indications or early warnings for its sudden emergence existed. The analysis of its origins is based on a dynamical seasonal climate forecast system where states of the ocean, atmosphere, land, sea ice, and atmospheric trace gases were initialized in late April 2012 and an ensemble of forecasts was made. Based on diagnosis of a spectrum of possible outcomes for precipitation over the Great Plains from this system, it is concluded that the extreme Great Plains drought did not require extreme external forcings, and could plausibly have arisen from atmospheric noise alone. Implications for developing early warning system for extreme events in general are also discussed.

1 comment:

  1. Drought decreasing in India:

    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/joc.3742/abstract

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