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Journal ArticleDOI

Climate change and North Sea storm surge extremes: an ensemble study of storm surge extremes expected in a changed climate projected by four different regional climate models

Katja Woth, +2 more
- 01 May 2006 - 
- Vol. 56, Iss: 1, pp 3-15
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors examined the future storm surge statistics for the North Sea based on numerical modeling and found that storm surge extremes may increase along the North sea coast towards the end of this century.
Abstract
The coastal zones are facing the prospect of changing storm surge statistics due to anthropogenic climate change. In the present study, we examine these prospects for the North Sea based on numerical modelling. The main tool is the barotropic tide-surge model TRIMGEO (Tidal Residual and Intertidal Mudflat Model) to derive storm surge climate and extremes from atmospheric conditions. The analysis is carried out by using an ensemble of four 30-year atmospheric regional simulations under present-day and possible future-enhanced greenhouse gas conditions. The atmospheric regional simulations were prepared within the EU project PRUDENCE (Prediction of Regional scenarios and Uncertainties for Defining EuropeaN Climate change risks and Effects). The research strategy of PRUDENCE is to compare simulations of different regional models driven by the same global control and climate change simulations. These global conditions, representative for 1961–1990 and 2071–2100 were prepared by the Hadley Center based on the IPCC A2 SRES scenario. The results suggest that under future climatic conditions, storm surge extremes may increase along the North Sea coast towards the end of this century. Based on a comparison between the results of the different ensemble members as well as on the variability estimated from a high-resolution storm surge reconstruction of the recent decades it is found that this increase is significantly different from zero at the 95% confidence level for most of the North Sea coast. An exception represents the East coast of the UK which is not affected by this increase of storm surge extremes.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Future extreme events in European climate: an exploration of regional climate model projections

TL;DR: In this article, a variety of diagnostic methods are used to determine how heat waves, heavy precipitation, drought, wind storms, and storm surges change between present (1961-90) and future (2071-2100) climate on the basis of regional climate model simulations produced by the PRUDENCE project.
Journal ArticleDOI

Future change of precipitation extremes in Europe: Intercomparison of scenarios from regional climate models

TL;DR: In this article, an analysis of the climate of precipitation extremes as simulated by six European regional climate models (RCMs) is undertaken in order to describe/quantify future changes and to examine/interpret differences between models.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing climate change impacts, sea level rise and storm surge risk in port cities: a case study on Copenhagen

TL;DR: In this paper, a simplified catastrophe risk assessment is presented to calculate the direct costs of storm surges under scenarios of sea level rise, coupled with an economic input-output (IO) model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Extreme sea levels on the rise along Europe's coasts

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that by the end of this century, the 100-year extreme sea level (ESL) along Europe's coastlines is on average projected to increase by 57 cm for Representative Concentration Pathways (RCP) 4.5 and 81 cm for RCP8.5.
References
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