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Project

 
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Storms Risk Mitigation - TEMPEST (Testing and Evaluating Model Predictions of European Storms) project

Status: completed
Publication State: published

Abstract

The TEMPEST (Testing and Evaluating Model Predictions of European Storms NE/I00520X/1) project was part of the Storms Risk Mitigation Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) research programme 2009-2014. The aims of TEMPEST were to improve understanding of how climate change and natural variability will affect the generation and evolution of extra-tropical cyclones. The project provided the first systematic assessment of how intense extratropical cyclones are predicted to change in the Fifth Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) climate models and by performing an integrated set of sensitivity experiments with the Met Office Unified Model, and quantify the key processes that determine the spread of climate model predictions. As well as data of the response of intense extratropical cyclones to climate change in very high-resolution global atmospheric model experiments which are capable of capturing mesoscale structures. It is envisaged that the outcomes from TEMPEST will feed directly into the forthcoming IPCC assessment report (AR5). TEMPEST also has strong synergies with other LWEC (Living With Environmental Change) programmes, most notably the JWCRP (Joint Met Office/NERC Weather and Climate Research Programme) and the CWC (Changing Water Cycle) research programme.
No data were archived for this project.

Abbreviation: tempest
Keywords: Not defined

Details

Keywords: Not defined
Previously used record identifiers:
http://badc.nerc.ac.uk/view/badc.nerc.ac.uk__ATOM__ACTIVITY_4250cbe4-401e-11e4-8677-00163e251233
http://badc.nerc.ac.uk/view/badc.nerc.ac.uk__ATOM__ACTIVITY_e6a7d3f4-53b4-11e0-88c9-00e081470265

More Information (under review)


Introduction

Storms Risk Mitigation is a NERC research programme 2009-2014. It has 3 sub projects :

Data from the TEMPEST project will be stored in the Storms Risk Mitigation data archive at the BADC.

Intense extratropical cyclones are one of the major weather risks in the mid-latitudes. High winds and extreme precipitation from extratropical cyclones can result in windstorm damage, flooding and coastal storm surge. Understanding the impacts of climate change on extratropical cyclones is critical to assessing future weather risk. TEMPEST is a 3-year proposed programme of research addressing the climate science deliverable of the NERC Storm Risk Mitigation directed programme. The climate deliverable is to provide an improved understanding of how climate change and natural variability will affect the generation and evolution of extra-tropical cyclones. TEMPEST will achieve this improved understanding by addressing the scientific questions raised in the Storm Risk Mitigation climate deliverable. TEMPEST aims to address these questions by, Providing the first systematic assessment of how intense extratropical cyclones are predicted to change in the Fifth Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) climate models Performing an integrated set of sensitivity experiments with the Met Office Unified Model to quantify the key processes that determine the spread of climate model predictions Investigating the response of intense extratropical cyclones to climate change in very high-resolution global atmospheric model experiments capable of capturing mesoscale structures.

The focus in TEMPEST is on intense extratropical cyclones that affect Europe. This is partly due to the socioeconomic impacts of such storms, but is also partly driven by the scientific need to address the particularly large spread in climate model predictions for extratropical cyclone activity over the North Atlantic and Europe. It is envisaged that the outcomes from TEMPEST will feed directly into the forthcoming IPCC assessment report (AR5). TEMPEST will also have strong synergies with other LWEC (Living With Environmental Change) programmes, most notably the JWCRP (Joint Met Office/NERC Weather and Climate Research Programme) and the CWC (Changing Water Cycle) research programme. The questions posed by the Storm Risk Mitigation climate deliverable cut across the traditional boundaries of weather and climate modelling communities. To tackle these questions, we aim to bring together scientists from the climate, weather and statistical communities at the Universities of Exeter, Oxford and Reading, the Met Office and ECMWF (European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts). By engaging the wider community within TEMPEST, we will enable the development of links with the Impacts and Numerical Weather Prediction projects in the Storm Risk Mitigation programme.

Related parties
Principal Investigators (1)