North Atlantic atmospheric circulation and surface wind in the Northeast of the Iberian Peninsula: Uncertainty and long term downscaled variability

  • E. García-Bustamante
  • , J. F. González-Rouco
  • , J. Navarro
  • , E. Xoplaki
  • , P. A. Jiménez
  • , J. P. Montávez

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

30 Scopus citations

Abstract

The variability and predictability of the surface wind field at the regional scale is explored over a complex terrain region in the northeastern Iberian Peninsula by means of a downscaling technique based on Canonical Correlation Analysis. More than a decade of observations (1992-2005) allows for calibrating and validating a statistical method that elicits the main associations between the large scale atmospheric circulation over the North Atlantic and Mediterranean areas and the regional wind field. In an initial step the downscaling model is designed by selecting parameter values from practise. To a large extent, the variability of the wind at monthly timescales is found to be governed by the large scale circulation modulated by the particular orographic features of the area. The sensitivity of the downscaling methodology to the selection of the model parameter values is explored, in a second step, by performing a systematic sampling of the parameters space, avoiding a heuristic selection. This provides a metric for the uncertainty associated with the various possible model configurations. The uncertainties associated with the model configuration are considerably dependent on the spatial variability of the wind. While the sampling of the parameters space in the model set up moderately impact estimations during the calibration period, the regional wind variability is very sensitive to the parameters selection at longer timescales. This fact illustrates that downscaling exercises based on a single configuration of parameters should be interpreted with extreme caution. The downscaling model is used to extend the estimations several centuries to the past using long datasets of sea level pressure, thereby illustrating the large temporal variability of the regional wind field from interannual to multicentennial timescales. The analysis does not evidence long term trends throughout the twentieth century, however anomalous episodes of high/low wind speeds are identified.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)141-160
Number of pages20
JournalClimate Dynamics
Volume38
Issue number1-2
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2012

Keywords

  • Past reconstruction
  • Sensitivity
  • Spatial and temporal variability
  • Statistical downscaling
  • Wind

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