Atmospheric circulation compounds anthropogenic warming and extreme climate impacts in Europe

ORAL

Abstract

Diagnosing dynamical changes in the climate system, such as those in atmospheric circulation patterns, remains challenging. Here, we study 1950-2021 trends in the frequency of occurrence of atmospheric circulation patterns over the North Atlantic. Roughly 7% of atmospheric circulation patterns display significant occurrence trends, yet they have major impacts on surface climate. Increasingly frequent patterns drive heatwaves across Europe, and enhanced wintertime storminess in the northern part of the continent. Over 91% of recent heatwave-related deaths and 33% of high-impact windstorms in Europe were concurrent with increasingly frequent atmospheric circulation patterns. Atmospheric patterns which are becoming rarer correspond instead to wet, cool summer conditions over northern Europe and wet winter conditions over continental Europe. The combined effect of these circulation changes is that of a strong, dynamically-driven year-round warming over most of the continent and large regional and seasonal changes in precipitation and surface wind.

*D.Faranda, M. Vrac, P. Yiou received funding under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (Grant agreement No. 101003469, XAIDA). D. Faranda, G. Messori and P. Yiou received funding under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, Marie Sklodowska-Curie (Grant agreement No. 956396, EDIPI). G. Messori received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (Grant agreement No. 948309, CENAE). D. Faranda acknowledges the support of the ANR-TERC grant BOREAS ANR-19-ERC7-0003 and the LEFE-MANU-INSU-CNRS grant DINCLIC. P. Yiou was supported by the French ANR grant No. ANR-20-CE01-0008-01 (SAMPRACE). All authors thank three anonymous reviewers and the editor for their support in improving the study.

Presenters

  • Davide Faranda

    • LSCE, IPSL, CNRS, CEA-Saclay

Authors

  • Davide Faranda

    • LSCE, IPSL, CNRS, CEA-Saclay
  • Gabriele Messori

    • Uppsala University
  • Aglae Jezequel

    • LMD - ENS, PSL, IPSL, France
  • Pascal Yiou

    • LSCE CEA Saclay, Université Paris Saclay, IPSL, France
  • Mathieu Vrac

    • LSCE CEA Saclay, CNRS, Université Paris Saclay, IPS, France