Tropical Cyclones and Climate Change: Global Landfall Frequency Projections Derived from Knutson et al.

Author:

Jewson Stephen1

Affiliation:

1. Lambda Climate Research, London, United Kingdom

Abstract

Abstract Projections of changes in tropical cyclone (TC) characteristics under climate change are of great interest to those affected by TCs. In a recent paper, Knutson et al. combined a large number of previous results to produce projections consisting of distributions of possible future TC frequencies, intensities, and rainfall rates. These distributions provide a great resource for users of TC information. However, to apply the distributions to impacts models may require the user to solve a number of technical challenges including modeling correlations, fitting distributions, interpolation, and converting the projections to properties at landfall. I consider the frequency and intensity changes, and implement solutions for each of these challenges using a combination of recently published research and a new methodology. This allows me to produce a dataset of TC projections that give frequency changes as a function of landfall region and intensity. Mean intensity changes can then be derived from frequency changes. The projections are presented in a format that allows them to be used in impacts models without further processing. The interpolation and landfall adjustments tend to increase the frequency changes. As a result, my projections give increasing mean frequencies of hurricane-strength landfalling TCs in four out of six global basins, with mean frequencies increasing by up to 16% for a 2°C increase in global mean surface temperature. My projections are highly uncertain, but include uncertainty estimates. They are designed to be a useful resource for anyone interested in possible future TC frequencies and intensities.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference25 articles.

1. Interagency discrepancies in tropical cyclone intensity estimates over the western North Pacific in recent years;Bai, L.,2023

2. Recent increases in tropical cyclone intensification rates;Bhatia, K.,2019

3. A globally consistent local-scale assessment of future tropical cyclone risk;Bloemendaal, N.,2022

4. Hazard footprint-based normalization of economic losses from tropical cyclones in China during 1983–2015;Chen, W.,2018

5. The impact of anthropogenic climate change on North Atlantic tropical cyclone tracks;Colbert, A.,2013

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