Advances in Statistical Climatology, Meteorology and Oceanography (Oct 2024)

Formally combining different lines of evidence in extreme-event attribution

  • F. E. L. Otto,
  • C. Barnes,
  • S. Philip,
  • S. Kew,
  • G. J. van Oldenborgh,
  • R. Vautard

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/ascmo-10-159-2024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10
pp. 159 – 171

Abstract

Read online

Event attribution methods are increasingly routinely used to assess the role of climate change in individual weather events. In order to draw robust conclusions about whether changes observed in the real world can be attributed to anthropogenic climate change, it is necessary to analyse trends in observations alongside those in climate models, where the factors driving changes in weather patterns are known. Here we present a quantitative statistical synthesis method, developed over 8 years of conducting rapid probabilistic event attribution studies, to combine quantitative attribution results from multi-model ensembles and other, qualitative, lines of evidence in a single framework to draw quantitative conclusions about the overarching role of human-induced climate change in individual weather events.