Abstract

During the summer of 2015, central Europe experienced a major heatwave that was preceded by anomalously cold sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the northern North Atlantic. Recent observation-based studies found a correlation between North Atlantic SST in spring and European summer temperatures, suggesting potential for predictability. Here we show, by using a high-resolution climate model, that ocean temperature anomalies, in combination with matching atmospheric and sea-ice initial conditions were key to the development of the 2015 European heatwave. In a series of 30-member ensemble simulations we test different combinations of ocean temperature and salinity initial states versus non-initialised climatology, mediated in both ensembles by different atmospheric/sea-ice initial conditions, using a non-standard initialisation method without data-assimilation. With the best combination of the initial ocean, and matching atmosphere/sea-ice initial conditions, the ensemble mean temperature response over central Europe in this set-up equals 60% of the observed anomaly, with 6 out of 30 ensemble-members showing similar, or even larger surface air temperature anomalies than observed.

Highlights

  • The importance of skilful seasonal forecasts is highlighted by the devastating socio-economic impacts of extreme summer conditions over Europe (Ciais et al 2005, Zampieri et al 2017)

  • There is increasing evidence that the ocean state can be a precursor for the shape of a season to come (Buchan et al 2014, Duchez et al 2016, Grist et al 2019, Hallam et al 2019)

  • The ocean temperature and salinity anomalies that contain a source of predictability may be present in the initial conditions as a consequence of the addition of these artificial sources and sinks of heat

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Summary

14 November 2019

Keywords: seasonal predictions, European summer, 2015 heatwave, 2015 cold blob, North Atlantic SST Supplementary material for this article is available online Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.

Introduction
Model setup To investigate the potential link between patterns of anomalous North
Initialisation approach
Observation-based data
Ocean state and the 2015 heatwave
Successful re-forecast of summer 2015
Matching ocean and atmospheric initial states
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
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