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Dive into the research topics where Mark Reyers is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark Reyers.


Journal of Climate | 2008

Changing Northern Hemisphere Storm Tracks in an Ensemble of IPCC Climate Change Simulations

Uwe Ulbrich; Joaquim G. Pinto; H. Kupfer; Gregor C. Leckebusch; Thomas Spangehl; Mark Reyers

Winter storm-track activity over the Northern Hemisphere and its changes in a greenhouse gas scenario (the Special Report on Emission Scenarios A1B forcing) are computed from an ensemble of 23 single runs from 16 coupled global climate models (CGCMs). All models reproduce the general structures of the observed climatological storm-track pattern under present-day forcing conditions. Ensemble mean changes resulting from anthropogenic forcing include an increase of baroclinic wave activity over the eastern North Atlantic, amounting to 5%–8% by the end of the twenty-first century. Enhanced activity is also found over the Asian continent and over the North Pacific near the Aleutian Islands. At high latitudes and over parts of the subtropics, activity is reduced. Variations of the individual models around the ensemble average signal are not small, with a median of the pattern correlation near r 0.5. There is, however, no evidence for a link between deviations in present-day climatology and deviations with respect to climate change.


Tellus A | 2010

Estimation of wind storm impacts over Western Germany under future climate conditions using a statistical-dynamical downscaling approach.

Joaquim G. Pinto; Christian P. Neuhaus; Gregor C. Leckebusch; Mark Reyers; M. J. Kerschgens

Abstract A statistical—dynamical regionalization approach is developed to assess possible changes in wind storm impacts. The method is applied to North Rhine-Westphalia (Western Germany) using the FOOT3DK mesoscale model for dynamical downscaling and ECHAM5/OM1 global circulation model climate projections. The method first classifies typical weather developments within the reanalysis period using K-means cluster algorithm. Most historical wind storms are associated with four weather developments (primary storm-clusters). Mesoscale simulations are performed for representative elements for all clusters to derive regional wind climatology. Additionally, 28 historical storms affecting Western Germany are simulated. Empirical functions are estimated to relate wind gust fields and insured losses. Transient ECHAM5/OM1 simulations show an enhanced frequency of primary storm-clusters and storms for 2060–2100 compared to 1960–2000. Accordingly, wind gusts increase over Western Germany, reaching locally +5% for 98th wind gust percentiles (A2-scenario). Consequently, storm losses are expected to increase substantially (+8% for A1B-scenario, +19% for A2-scenario). Regional patterns show larger changes over north-eastern parts of North Rhine-Westphalia than for western parts. For storms with return periods above 20 yr, loss expectations for Germany may increase by a factor of 2. These results document the method’s functionality to assess future changes in loss potentials in regional terms.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2016

MiKlip - a National Research Project on Decadal Climate Prediction

Jochem Marotzke; Wolfgang A. Müller; F. S. E. Vamborg; Paul Becker; Ulrich Cubasch; Hendrik Feldmann; Frank Kaspar; C. Kottmeier; Camille Marini; Iuliia Polkova; Kerstin Prömmel; Henning W. Rust; Detlef Stammer; Uwe Ulbrich; Christopher Kadow; Armin Köhl; Jürgen Kröger; Tim Kruschke; Joaquim G. Pinto; Holger Pohlmann; Mark Reyers; Marc Schröder; Frank Sienz; Claudia Timmreck; Markus Ziese

AbstractMittelfristige Klimaprognose (MiKlip), an 8-yr German national research project on decadal climate prediction, is organized around a global prediction system comprising the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model (MPI-ESM) together with an initialization procedure and a model evaluation system. This paper summarizes the lessons learned from MiKlip so far; some are purely scientific, others concern strategies and structures of research that target future operational use.Three prediction system generations have been constructed, characterized by alternative initialization strategies; the later generations show a marked improvement in hindcast skill for surface temperature. Hindcast skill is also identified for multiyear-mean European summer surface temperatures, extratropical cyclone tracks, the quasi-biennial oscillation, and ocean carbon uptake, among others. Regionalization maintains or slightly enhances the skill in European surface temperature inherited from the global model and also displays h...


Environmental Research Letters | 2014

Return periods of losses associated with European windstorm series in a changing climate

Melanie K. Karremann; Joaquim G. Pinto; Mark Reyers; Matthias Klawa

Possible future changes of clustering and return periods (RPs) of European storm series with high potential losses are quantified. Historical storm series are identified using 40 winters of reanalysis. Time series of top events (1, 2 or 5 year return levels (RLs)) are used to assess RPs of storm series both empirically and theoretically. Additionally, 800 winters of general circulation model simulations for present (1960–2000) and future (2060–2100) climate conditions are investigated. Clustering is identified for most countries, and estimated RPs are similar for reanalysis and present day simulations. Future changes of RPs are estimated for fixed RLs and fixed loss index thresholds. For the former, shorter RPs are found for Western Europe, but changes are small and spatially heterogeneous. For the latter, which combines the effects of clustering and event ranking shifts, shorter RPs are found everywhere except for Mediterranean countries. These changes are generally not statistically significant between recent and future climate. However, the RPs for the fixed loss index approach are mostly beyond the range of pre-industrial natural climate variability. This is not true for fixed RLs. The quantification of losses associated with storm series permits a more adequate windstorm risk assessment in a changing climate.


Tellus A | 2016

Decadal predictability of regional scale wind speed and wind energy potentials over Central Europe

Julia Moemken; Mark Reyers; Benjamin Buldmann; Joaquim G. Pinto

Decadal predictions on timescales from one year to one decade are gaining importance since this time frame falls within the planning horizon of politics, economy and society. The present study examines the decadal predictability of regional wind speed and wind energy potentials in three generations of the MiKlip (‘Mittelfristige Klimaprognosen’) decadal prediction system. The system is based on the global Max-Planck-Institute Earth System Model (MPI-ESM), and the three generations differ primarily in the ocean initialisation. Ensembles of uninitialised historical and yearly initialised hindcast experiments are used to assess the forecast skill for 10 m wind speeds and wind energy output (Eout) over Central Europe with lead times from one year to one decade. With this aim, a statistical-dynamical downscaling (SDD) approach is used for the regionalisation. Its added value is evaluated by comparison of skill scores for MPI-ESM large-scale wind speeds and SDD-simulated regional wind speeds. All three MPI-ESM ensemble generations show some forecast skill for annual mean wind speed and Eout over Central Europe on yearly and multi-yearly time scales. This forecast skill is mostly limited to the first years after initialisation. Differences between the three ensemble generations are generally small. The regionalisation preserves and sometimes increases the forecast skills of the global runs but results depend on lead time and ensemble generation. Moreover, regionalisation often improves the ensemble spread. Seasonal Eout skills are generally lower than for annual means. Skill scores are lowest during summer and persist longest in autumn. A large-scale westerly weather type with strong pressure gradients over Central Europe is identified as potential source of the skill for wind energy potentials, showing a similar forecast skill and a high correlation with Eout anomalies. These results are promising towards the establishment of a decadal prediction system for wind energy applications over Central Europe.


Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics | 2012

Heat and moisture budgets from airborne measurements and high-resolution model simulations

Stefan Zacharias; Mark Reyers; Joaquim G. Pinto; Jan H. Schween; Susanne Crewell; M. J. Kerschgens

High-resolution simulations with a mesoscale model are performed to estimate heat and moisture budgets of a well-mixed boundary layer. The model budgets are validated against energy budgets obtained from airborne measurements over heterogeneous terrain in Western Germany. Time rate of change, vertical divergence, and horizontal advection for an atmospheric column of air are estimated. Results show that the time trend of specific humidity exhibits some deficiencies, while the potential temperature trend is matched accurately. Furthermore, the simulated turbulent surface fluxes of sensible and latent heat are comparable to the measured fluxes, leading to similar values of the vertical divergence. The analysis of different horizontal model resolutions exhibits improved surface fluxes with increased resolution, a fact attributed to a reduced aggregation effect. Scale-interaction effects could be identified: while time trends and advection are strongly influenced by mesoscale forcing, the turbulent surface fluxes are mainly controlled by microscale processes.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Natural wind variability triggered drop in German redispatch volume and costs from 2015 to 2016

Jan Wohland; Mark Reyers; Carolin Märker; Dirk Witthaut

Avoiding dangerous climate change necessitates the decarbonization of electricity systems within the next few decades. In Germany, this decarbonization is based on an increased exploitation of variable renewable electricity sources such as wind and solar power. While system security has remained constantly high, the integration of renewables causes additional costs. In 2015, the costs of grid management saw an all time high of about € 1 billion. Despite the addition of renewable capacity, these costs dropped substantially in 2016. We thus investigate the effect of natural climate variability on grid management costs in this study. We show that the decline is triggered by natural wind variability focusing on redispatch as a main cost driver. In particular, we find that 2016 was a weak year in terms of wind generation averages and the occurrence of westerly circulation weather types. Moreover, we show that a simple model based on the wind generation time series is skillful in detecting redispatch events on timescales of weeks and beyond. As a consequence, alterations in annual redispatch costs in the order of hundreds of millions of euros need to be understood and communicated as a normal feature of the current system due to natural wind variability.


Tellus A | 2016

Evaluation of moisture sources for the Central European summer flood of May/June 2013 based on regional climate model simulations

Fanni Dóra Kelemen; Patrick Ludwig; Mark Reyers; Sven Ulbrich; Joaquim G. Pinto

Heavy precipitation affected Central Europe in May/June 2013, triggering damaging floods both on the Danube and the Elbe rivers. Based on a modelling approach with COSMO-CLM, moisture fluxes, backward trajectories, cyclone tracks and precipitation fields are evaluated for the relevant time period 30 May–2 June 2013. We identify potential moisture sources and quantify their contribution to the flood event focusing on the Danube basin through sensitivity experiments: Control simulations are performed with undisturbed ERA-Interim boundary conditions, while multiple sensitivity experiments are driven with modified evaporation characteristics over selected marine and land areas. Two relevant cyclones are identified both in reanalysis and in our simulations, which moved counter-clockwise in a retrograde path from Southeastern Europe over Eastern Europe towards the northern slopes of the Alps. The control simulations represent the synoptic evolution of the event reasonably well. The evolution of the precipitation event in the control simulations shows some differences in terms of its spatial and temporal characteristics compared to observations. The main precipitation event can be separated into two phases concerning the moisture sources. Our modelling results provide evidence that the two main sources contributing to the event were the continental evapotranspiration (moisture recycling; both phases) and the North Atlantic Ocean (first phase only). The Mediterranean Sea played only a minor role as a moisture source. This study confirms the importance of continental moisture recycling for heavy precipitation events over Central Europe during the summer half year.


Archive | 2017

Winde und Zyklonen

Joaquim G. Pinto; Mark Reyers

Fur das zukunftige Klima ist eine Verschiebung der nordatlantischen storm tracks in Richtung Europa wahrscheinlich, was die Windaktivitaten stark beeinflussen wird. In Beobachtungen der vergangenen Jahrzehnte und in Klimaprojektionen fur das zukunftige Klima wird eine starke zwischenjahrliche Schwankung bei der Zyklonenaktivitat uber dem Nordatlantik festgestellt. In diesem Kapitel werden beobachtete Trends den Ergebnissen der Klimamodellierung zukunftiger Windaktivitaten gegenubergestellt. Die Autoren diskutieren die Robustheit der Ergebnisse und stellen dar, warum extreme Sturmereignisse kunftig haufiger auftreten konnten.


Climate Dynamics | 2007

Changes in storm track and cyclone activity in three SRES ensemble experiments with the ECHAM5/MPI-OM1 GCM

Joaquim G. Pinto; Uwe Ulbrich; Gregor C. Leckebusch; Thomas Spangehl; Mark Reyers; Stefan Zacharias

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Joaquim G. Pinto

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Hendrik Feldmann

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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C. Kottmeier

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Uwe Ulbrich

Free University of Berlin

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Dirk Witthaut

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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