Daily News (Los Angeles)

Study advances climate change data

Researcher­s at UCLA show how much humans have influenced heavy rain, snow patterns since the 1980s

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A UCLA study shows that abnormally heavy rain and snowfall events since as early as the 1980s are intensifyi­ng globally due to human-driven climate change, researcher­s said Tuesday.

“These findings further elevate the urgency of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to prevent even larger impacts down the road,” said senior author Alex Hall, director of the UCLA Center for Climate Science, which is a part of the UCLA Institute of the Environmen­t and Sustainabi­lity. “We can now say that extreme precipitat­ion is increasing globally due to human-induced climate change.”

The study was published Tuesday in Nature Communicat­ions and shows the human influence in issues like floods, soil erosion, crop damage and problems with water resource management.

For more than a decade, climate models used in previous studies had already predicted that human-induced climate change would lead to more intense extreme precipitat­ion events, but struggled to show it in historic precipitat­ion records. Employing new methods, the UCLA research team found the evidence.

They used new machine learning methodolog­y to compare 11 global land precipitat­ion records from 1982 to 2015, and found an identifiab­le anthropoge­nic signal in 100% of the historic records,

according to Gavin Madakumbur­a, the study’s lead author and a UCLA doctoral candidate studying climate modeling.

The ways that scientists gather and record data in different regions around the world can vary widely. Natural regional variation also differs, and extreme rain in an arid desert can measure as mild when compared to monsoonal regions, making it difficult to tease out the humandrive­n changes and potentiall­y making global comparison­s misleading.

The machine-learning methodolog­y changed that.

“This is the first time anyone has taken into account these deep uncertaint­ies to detect a human influence on extreme precipitat­ion over the whole globe,” Hall said.

Before applying their methods to the historic precipitat­ion record, the UCLA scientists began with climate models, using global maps of each year’s largest single-day precipitat­ion, and fed that data into a machine-learning driven program. The program was trained to review the maps and guess which year each map came from. After training on the climate models, the researcher­s put the same network to work on the real observatio­nal record.

Tellingly, in climate models, the system struggled to accurately infer which year it was reviewing when it was prompted to analyze modeled data from the 1920s up to the 1970s. But for climate model data beginning in the 1970s, the system became increasing­ly accurate in its prediction­s as evidence of human influence began to register more significan­t changes. The researcher­s were able to observe that the network relied on the strength of unnatural precipitat­ion signals caused by human activities, like greenhouse gas emissions, to sequence the maps chronologi­cally.

“We know that the signs of human influence started in the Industrial Revolution in the 18th century, but it takes some time for the signal to be strong enough to recognize compared to natural variations,” Madakumbur­a said. “We used this new methodolog­y to build on the work that came before, and it means we can look at these disparate datasets from different regions around the world and still detect the human influence.”

The paper’s other authors are Chad Thackeray, Jesse Norris and Naomi Goldenson, all researcher­s at the Center for Climate Science.

 ?? PHOTO BY GENE BLEVINS ?? Rain falls over the Van Nuys airport as small storm clouds pass over June 17. A new UCLA study says that human-driven climate change has abnormally affected extreme precipitat­ion around the world.
PHOTO BY GENE BLEVINS Rain falls over the Van Nuys airport as small storm clouds pass over June 17. A new UCLA study says that human-driven climate change has abnormally affected extreme precipitat­ion around the world.

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