How important have century-long shifts in climate been?
This map shows how wet and dry periods have varied over time. Draw a rectangle over
a region or click a place on the map, to see graphs for that location. These graphs
depict how much rainfall (or temperature) varies from year to year, decade to decade,
and over the past century. This information can be used for planning purposes on different
timescales, and to provide context for recent memories of rainfall patterns or specific
events in a longer-term perspective.
If 10-year shifts are orange or red, then decade-long shifts in rain or temperature
may be particularly important in your location.
Observations Data Source:
monthly mean precipitation and temperature from CRU TS 3.1
Helpdesks
Contact ifrc@iri.columbia.edu if you are a humanitarian-decision maker with questions about information in this
Map Room, or other weather and climate related questions. We usually respond within
one business day.
Contact help@iri.columbia.edu with any technical questions or problems with this Map Room, for example, the forecasts
not displaying or updating properly.
What is this tool?
This “Recent Climate Trends Maproom” shows how wet and dry (or hot and cold) periods
have varied over the past century. Many parts of the world have dry seasons and rainy
seasons (or summers and winters) within each year, but also have entire years or decades
that are unusually dry or wet (or hot or cold). These graphs are intended to show
trends in rain/snow (or temperature) over three “timescales”:
Year-to-year shifts (black line is actual rainfall)
Decade-long shifts (smooth blue line)
Century-long trends (straight purple line)
On the map, if the colour of a location is closer to red, it means that century long
shifts in rain (or temperature) may have greater importance for that location. The
legend shows the degree of important of rainfall (or temperature) changes that can
be explained by this century long trend.
Use this tool to:
Examine the context and history of a wet/dry (or hot/cool) trend that you are currently
experiencing.
See if there have been past century long shifts to help you prepare to expect them
in the future.
See if there is evidence that a longer-term shift in rainfall/temperature is already
underway (purple line).
Not recommended to:
Just look at one gridpoint (this could be misleading). Check a few in the same area,
or average over a larger box.
Just look at one timescale. Actual rainfall is influenced by yearly, decade long,
and century long shifts.
Use this as a tool to predict the future. It shows only historical information.
How do I use this tool?
Pick your location by clicking on a point on the top map, selecting a preset region
from the blue sidebar, or drawing a box with the mouse for an area average (in this
case, click the box for “regional analysis”). A graph should appear at the bottom
to show rainfall/snowfall in your location for the last 100 years (see above for information
about these graphs). BE PATIENT as the graph sometimes takes a few minutes to calculate.
Start by looking at the long-term trend (purple line) to see if there is any evidence
of a longer-term trend in rainfall over the past 100 years. This may or may not be
in alignment with longer-term climate change projections for the 21st century you
gather from sources like the IPCC. If you have questions about the alignment of past trends and future projections,
email the IFRC Help Desk at IRI. Even if there is some evidence of a long-term trend, you’ll probably notice it
is very small and that rainfall varies a lot more in shorter timescales (seasons,
years, decades).
Next, look at the blue line of decade-long shifts. You can find a blue number at the
top of the graph next to the word “Decade-long shifts” that indicates how much of
the historical rainfall or temperature can be explained by this blue line. If this
number is above 20%, then 10-year phases might be important in the location you selected.
If these phases are important in your location, you will want to take that into consideration
when thinking about the longer-term climate change projections, so that you’re prepared
to experience periods of rainfall that may contradict what is predicted for the longer-term
trend.
If there is very little importance of the blue line, then you can focus more on the
year-to-year shifts as well as the longer-term trends.
If you have experienced a dry or wet (or hot or cold) period lasting multiple years
in your location, the blue line might help determine if you were in a wet or dry (or
hot or cold) 10-year phase. If so, when the phase changes, you could see opposite
results, and the recent pattern might not be due to a longer term climate trend.
Finally, look at the actual rainfall in your location (black line). It is common
for most of the ups and downs (65% or more) in rainfall to happen on the season-to-season
or year-to-year timescale. This just means that rainfall fluctuates a good amount
from year to year. There are forecasts available to predict rainfall every season, so monitoring these can be helpful to
anticipate heightened flood and drought risk. Can you pick out years of very high
or low rains? Additionally, it can be helpful to note that the range of the real
data is likely to be much greater than any increase or decrease in rainfall shown
over time by the longer-term climate change trend. In any given year, the short-term
year-to-year fluctuations can overshadow the longer-term climate change trend.