日本地球惑星科学連合2019年大会

講演情報

[E] ポスター発表

セッション記号 A (大気水圏科学) » A-CG 大気海洋・環境科学複合領域・一般

[A-CG35] 地球規模環境変化の予測と検出

2019年5月29日(水) 10:45 〜 12:15 ポスター会場 (幕張メッセ国際展示場 8ホール)

コンビーナ:河宮 未知生(海洋研究開発機構)、建部 洋晶(海洋研究開発機構)、立入 郁(海洋研究開発機構)

[ACG35-P01] World Regionalization of Climate Change (19612010)

*Shao Sun1,2Peijun Shi2,3,4Daoyi Gong2Tao Zhou2 (1.National Climate Center, China Meteorological Administration, Beijing 100081, China、2.State Key Laboratory of Earth Surface Processes and Resource Ecology, Beijing Normal University, Beijing 100875, China、3.Key Laboratory of Environmental Change and Natural Disaster of Ministry of Education, Beijing Normal University, Beijing 100875, China、4.Academy of Disaster Reduction and Emergency Management, Ministry of Civil Affairs & Ministry of Education, Beijing 100875, China)

キーワード:Climate change, Regionalization, Tendency, Fluctuation, World

Existing climate regionalization aims to characterize the regional differences in climate based on years of the mean values of climate indices. However, with the accelerating climate change nowadays, existing climate regionalization cannot represent the regional difference of climate change, nor can it reflect the extreme weather and climate disasters and environmental risks incurred from climate changes. This paper utilizes the tendency value and fluctuation value of temperature and precipitation from 1961 to 2010 to identify the climate change quantitatively, and completes world regionalization of climate change (1961–2010) with administrative subdivisions of countries as the basic unit in combination with world's terrain feature. Level-I regionalization divides world's climate change (1961–2010) into twelve tendency zones based on the tendency of temperature and precipitation; level-II regionalization refers to twenty-eight fluctuation regions based on level-I regionalization according to the fluctuation of temperature and precipitation. Climate change regionalization provides a basis for countries and regions in the world to develop plans for adapting to climate change, especially for managing extreme weather and climate disasters and environmental risks.