使用不同热量指标对欧洲主要城市的环境热量进行高分辨率预测

Clemens Schwingshackl, A. Daloz, Carley E. Iles, K. Aunan, J. Sillmann
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摘要

摘要由于气候变化,预计城市中的热压力将大幅增加。城市的高人口密度和城市热岛效应将加剧相关的健康风险。然而,由于存在多种量化环境热量的指标,且气候模型的空间分辨率通常较低,因此影响仍不确定。在此,我们根据最近制作的欧洲区域气候模式模拟集合(EURO-CORDEX),以 0.11∘ 的空间分辨率(12.5 千米)对欧洲 36 个主要城市的环境热量进行了预测。0.11∘的EURO-CORDEX集合提供了目前整个欧洲气候模式预测集合的最佳空间分辨率,使得在城市层面分析极端气温和热浪风险成为可能。我们将重点放在三个基于温度的热量指标--年最高气温、气温超过 30 ∘C 的天数和热浪强度日指数 (HWMId)--上,根据 EURO-CORDEX 组合中的气候数据,分析与 1981-2010 年相比,在升温 3 ∘C 的情况下欧洲的环境热量预测。结果表明,欧洲南部城市将尤其受到高水平环境热量的影响,但根据所考虑的指标,欧洲中部、东部和北部城市的环境热量也可能大幅增加。在一些城市,三种热量指标对环境热量的预测差异很大,这表明基于单一指标的估计可能会低估热应激对健康造成不利影响的可能性。根据日最低气温量化的夜间环境热量显示出与白天类似的空间模式,尽管 HWMId 值要高得多。已确定的环境热量空间模式与全球地球系统模型的结果基本一致,但个别城市之间存在很大差异。我们的研究结果强调了高分辨率气候模式模拟对分析城市极端气候的价值。同时,这些结果还强调,改进气候模式中对城市地区的简单描述,将使其模拟结果对规划城市适应措施更有价值。此外,我们的研究结果还强调,使用互补指标预测环境热量,可以深入了解未来热压力的风险,否则可能会错过这些信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
High-resolution projections of ambient heat for major European cities using different heat metrics
Abstract. Heat stress in cities is projected to strongly increase due to climate change. The associated health risks will be exacerbated by the high population density in cities and the urban heat island effect. However, impacts are still uncertain, which is among other factors due to the existence of multiple metrics for quantifying ambient heat and the typically rather coarse spatial resolution of climate models. Here we investigate projections of ambient heat for 36 major European cities based on a recently produced ensemble of regional climate model simulations for Europe (EURO-CORDEX) at 0.11∘ spatial resolution (∼ 12.5 km). The 0.11∘ EURO-CORDEX ensemble provides the best spatial resolution currently available from an ensemble of climate model projections for the whole of Europe and makes it possible to analyse the risk of temperature extremes and heat waves at the city level. We focus on three temperature-based heat metrics – yearly maximum temperature, number of days with temperatures exceeding 30 ∘C, and Heat Wave Magnitude Index daily (HWMId) – to analyse projections of ambient heat at 3 ∘C warming in Europe compared to 1981–2010 based on climate data from the EURO-CORDEX ensemble. The results show that southern European cities will be particularly affected by high levels of ambient heat, but depending on the considered metric, cities in central, eastern, and northern Europe may also experience substantial increases in ambient heat. In several cities, projections of ambient heat vary considerably across the three heat metrics, indicating that estimates based on a single metric might underestimate the potential for adverse health effects due to heat stress. Nighttime ambient heat, quantified based on daily minimum temperatures, shows similar spatial patterns to daytime conditions, albeit with substantially higher HWMId values. The identified spatial patterns of ambient heat are generally consistent with results from global Earth system models, though with substantial differences for individual cities. Our results emphasise the value of high-resolution climate model simulations for analysing climate extremes at the city level. At the same time, they highlight that improving the predominantly rather simple representations of urban areas in climate models would make their simulations even more valuable for planning adaptation measures in cities. Further, our results stress that using complementary metrics for projections of ambient heat gives important insights into the risk of future heat stress that might otherwise be missed.
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