2015
DOI: 10.1002/wcc.380
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Attribution of extreme weather and climate‐related events

Abstract: Extreme weather and climate‐related events occur in a particular place, by definition, infrequently. It is therefore challenging to detect systematic changes in their occurrence given the relative shortness of observational records. However, there is a clear interest from outside the climate science community in the extent to which recent damaging extreme events can be linked to human‐induced climate change or natural climate variability. Event attribution studies seek to determine to what extent anthropogenic… Show more

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Cited by 516 publications
(432 citation statements)
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References 57 publications
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“…As part of the ENSEMBLES project (van der Linden and Mitchell, 2009), this dataset was designed for the evaluation of daily precipitation across Europe in RCMs at similar resolutions to the AGCM simulations used here. This makes E-OBS the dataset of choice for our purposes and we refer to differences of model precipitation from E-OBS as model biases.…”
Section: Observed Precipitationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As part of the ENSEMBLES project (van der Linden and Mitchell, 2009), this dataset was designed for the evaluation of daily precipitation across Europe in RCMs at similar resolutions to the AGCM simulations used here. This makes E-OBS the dataset of choice for our purposes and we refer to differences of model precipitation from E-OBS as model biases.…”
Section: Observed Precipitationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yuan et al, 2015;Arnell and Gosling, 2016;Scoccimarro et al, 2016), and extreme event attribution (e.g. Stott et al, 2016;Schaller et al, 2016). Due to the wide range of applications, the required realism concerns all aspects of the precipitation distribution in space and time including the probability distribution function of the precipitation time series and its extremes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Second, changes in the climate variables affect the frequency of climate-related hazards (IPCC 2012). Third, the frequency of climaterelated hazards affects the risk of natural disasters (IPCC 2012, Stott et al 2012). …”
Section: Rising Trends and Their Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Section 3.4, we analyse the potential future evolution of two extreme indices, TXx and RX1day, from global climate models. Here, we analyse the three WP climate records discussed above by fitting the time series of TNn, TXx and RX1day to the Generalised Extreme Value distribution (details given in Supplementary A) with smoothed global average temperatures as a covariate [21][22][23][24]. Table 7 provides results for this analysis for return periods calculated for the climate at the time of the record and again in 2015 and the respective ratio between these for the WP record statistics and A posteriori determined "moderate" extreme values (a threshold of 75 mm, 32 • C and −8 • C for precipitation, TXx and TNn, respectively) that have an approximate return period of a decade.…”
Section: Extremesmentioning
confidence: 99%