2007
DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2007.2073
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Issues in the interpretation of climate model ensembles to inform decisions

Abstract: There is a scientific consensus regarding the reality of anthropogenic climate change. This has led to substantial efforts to reduce atmospheric greenhouse gas emissions and thereby mitigate the impacts of climate change on a global scale. Despite these efforts, we are committed to substantial further changes over at least the next few decades. Societies will therefore have to adapt to changes in climate. Both adaptation and mitigation require action on scales ranging from local to global, but adaptation could… Show more

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Cited by 175 publications
(151 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
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“…The use of ensembles of models and techniques is one way to get a handle on and to represent these uncertainties (e.g. Murphy et al, 2004;Stainforth et al, 2007;Cloke and Pappenberger, 2009;Weisheimer et al, 2011), and an ensemble of ensembles can be termed a grand ensemble .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The use of ensembles of models and techniques is one way to get a handle on and to represent these uncertainties (e.g. Murphy et al, 2004;Stainforth et al, 2007;Cloke and Pappenberger, 2009;Weisheimer et al, 2011), and an ensemble of ensembles can be termed a grand ensemble .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, the possible range of climate changes might not be fully explored if an analysis relies exclusively on climate projections. Instead, climate model projections scope a "minimum range of irreducible uncertainty" [Stainforth et al, 2007]. In other words, the range of projections represents some of the uncertainty in the possible range of future climate but not the full range of possible climate changes.…”
Section: General Circulation Model-based Predictions and Their Limitamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is a significant area of research in the impacts or applications of climate change which takes the raw climate information and uses further modelling techniques to produce societal-relevant information (New et al 2007;Stainforth et al 2007b). Impacts models are diverse and examples are available in the prediction of river flow and other hydrological variables, crop yield and energy demand.…”
Section: Predictions For Usersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Resolving the three-dimensional flow of the ocean and atmosphere in the finest grid practicable and including representations of unresolved sub-grid-scale processes, they are the most computationally expensive. Standard supercomputer resources can be employed to produce ensembles with tens to hundreds of members (Murphy et al 2007;Tebaldi & Knutti 2007): much larger ensembles have only been possible using highly novel computing techniques (Frame et al 2007;Stainforth et al 2007b). They are the only way of providing predictions at regional scales and for 'exotic' variables such as extreme precipitation, for example.…”
Section: The Hierarchy Of Climate Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%