Hans Alexandersson’s research while affiliated with Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute and other places

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Publications (35)


Observed Climate Variability and Change
  • Chapter
  • Full-text available

September 2021

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1,468 Reads

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118 Citations

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H Von Storch

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B Nyenzi
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Climate and climate related issues for the safety assessment SR-Site

December 2010

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120 Reads

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9 Citations

This document presents information on climate and climate-related issues relevant for long-term safety of a KBS-3 repository for spent nuclear fuel. It supports the safety assessment SR-Site. The report was compiled by Assoc. Prof. Jens-Ove Näslund, SKB. A number of additional authors have contributed to various sections of the report as listed in Table 1-1.


Fig. 4 Temporal evolution of the filtered 24 h pressure changes 95th percentiles. Left to right stations in North-Western, Northern and Central Europe
European storminess: Late nineteenth century to present

January 2008

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518 Reads

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192 Citations

Climate Dynamics

Annual and seasonal statistics of local air pressure characteristics have already been used as proxies for storminess across Northern Europe. We present an update of such proxies for Northern Europe and an unprecedented analysis for Central Europe which together considerably extends the current knowledge of European storminess. Calculations are completed for three sets of stations, located in North-Western, Northern and Central Europe. Results derived from spatial differences (geostrophic winds) and single station pressure changes per 24h support each other. Geostrophic winds’ high percentiles (95th, 99th) were relatively high during the late nineteenth and the early twentieth century; after that they leveled off somewhat, to get larger again in the late twentieth century. The decrease happens suddenly in Central Europe and over several decades in Northern Europe. The subsequent rise is most pronounced in North-Western Europe, while slow and steady in Central Europe. Europe’s storm climate has undergone significant changes throughout the past 130years and comprises significant variations on a quasi-decadal timescale. Most recent years feature average or calm conditions, supporting claims raised in earlier studies with new evidence. Aside from some dissimilarity, a general agreement between the investigated regions appears to be the most prominent feature. The capability of the NAO index to explain storminess across Europe varies in space and with the considered period.



Table 1 . List of Climate Indices Used in This Study 
Indices for daily temperature and precipitation extremes in Europe analyzed for the period 1901–2000

November 2006

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603 Reads

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500 Citations

Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres

We analyze century-long daily temperature and precipitation records for stations in Europe west of 60°E. A set of climatic indices derived from the daily series, mainly focusing on extremes, is defined. Linear trends in these indices are assessed over the period 1901–2000. Average trends, for 75 stations mostly representing Europe west of 20°E, show a warming for all temperature indices. Winter has, on average, warmed more (~1.0°C/100 yr) than summer (~0.8°C), both for daily maximum (TX) and minimum (TN) temperatures. Overall, the warming of TX in winter was stronger in the warm tail than in the cold tail (1.6 and 1.5°C for 98th and 95th, but ~1.0°C for 2nd, 5th and 10th percentiles). There are, however, large regional differences in temperature trend patterns. For summer, there is a tendency for stronger warming, both for TX and TN, in the warm than in the cold tail only in parts of central Europe. Winter precipitation totals, averaged over 121 European stations north of 40°N, have increased significantly by ~12% per 100 years. Trends in 90th, 95th and 98th percentiles of daily winter precipitation have been similar. No overall long-term trend occurred in summer precipitation totals, but there is an overall weak (statistically insignificant and regionally dependent) tendency for summer precipitation to have become slightly more intense but less common. Data inhomogeneities and relative sparseness of station density in many parts of Europe preclude more robust conclusions. It is of importance that new methods are developed for homogenizing daily data.


Climate and climate related issues for the safety assessment SR-Can

October 2006

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136 Reads

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13 Citations

The purpose of this report is to document current scientific knowledge on climate and climate-related conditions, relevant to the long-term safety of a repository for low- and intermediate-level nuclear waste, to a level required for an adequate treatment in the safety assessment SR-PSU. The report also presents a number of dedicated studies on climate and selected climate-related processes of relevance for the assessment of long-term repository safety. Based on this information, the report presents a number of possible future climate developments for Forsmark, the site where the existing SFR1 is located and where the extension SFR3 is planned (Figure 1-1). The presented future climate develop- ments (“climate cases”) are used as a basis for the selection and analysis of SR-PSU safety assessment scenarios in the SR-PSU main report (SKB 2014a). The present report is based on research published in the general scientific literature as well as research conducted and published by SKB.


Daily Mean Sea Level Pressure Reconstructions for the European–North Atlantic Region for the Period 1850–2003

June 2006

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435 Reads

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231 Citations

The development of a daily historical European–North Atlantic mean sea level pressure dataset (EMSLP) for 1850–2003 on a 5° latitude by longitude grid is described. This product was produced using 86 continental and island stations distributed over the region 25°–70°N, 70°W–50°E blended with marine data from the International Comprehensive Ocean–Atmosphere Data Set (ICOADS). The EMSLP fields for 1850–80 are based purely on the land station data and ship observations. From 1881, the blended land and marine fields are combined with already available daily Northern Hemisphere fields. Complete coverage is obtained by employing reduced space optimal interpolation. Squared correlations (r2) indicate that EMSLP generally captures 80%–90% of daily variability represented in an existing historical mean sea level pressure product and over 90% in modern 40-yr European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Re-Analyses (ERA-40) over most of the region. A lack of sufficient observations over Greenland and the Middle East, however, has resulted in poorer reconstructions there. Error estimates, produced as part of the reconstruction technique, flag these as regions of low confidence. It is shown that the EMSLP daily fields and associated error estimates provide a unique opportunity to examine the circulation patterns associated with extreme events across the European–North Atlantic region, such as the 2003 heat wave, in the context of historical events.


Response of old‐growth montane Picea abies (L.) Karst. forest to climatic variability in northern Sweden

April 2006

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69 Reads

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35 Citations

summaryRepeat photography and tree ring analyses were used to investigate structural change, 1938–88, of an old growth and high elevation Picea abies (L.) Karst. forest in northern Sweden. The forest, initially moribund, senescent and top-broken, regenerated broken tops and apparently gained in vigour. Up to the 1930s this progressive change was pre-dated by an increase of annual increment growth, which subsequently declined until the 1980s, The tree-ring response concurs with the general course of summer temperature while canopy processes appear to lag behind. The study stresses the importance of phenotypic plasticity for Long-term behavior of marginal J spruce forest. It is also evident that canopy development is not a fully predictable ageing process, but to some extent dependent on climatic variability.


The surface winds of Sweden during 1999–2000

February 2006

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67 Reads

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31 Citations

This study aims at increasing our understanding of the regional wind climate in Sweden. Spatial and temporal patterns of the surface winds are presented for the years 1999–2000. Annual mean wind speeds range between 2 and 5 m/s with high values at exposed mountainous sites and on islands off the coast. Combining wind speed and direction into mean wind velocities shows that flow conditions are stronger and more coherent in space in southern Sweden than in central and northern Sweden. The spatial scale, defined as the distance between stations when the correlation for wind speed drops to ∼0.37, was determined by pairwise correlations between all possible station pairs. Scales range from 38 to 530 km for wind speed and from 40 to 830 km for wind direction depending on the region. They tend to be smaller in central and northern Sweden, where the more pronounced relief has a larger influence on the local wind conditions. The strength and the timing of the annual and diurnal wind speed cycle have been estimated for each station. Amplitudes of the annual cycle are greater at exposed sites and correlate generally well with annual mean wind speeds. Monthly mean wind speeds peak in winter in southern Sweden, but peak in other seasons in the remaining regions. In winter, weaker pressure gradients over northern Sweden and surface-near temperature inversions contribute to weaker surface winds. Diurnal cycles vary in strength between summer and winter. Compared to the last normal climate period (1961–1990), 1999–2000 is characterized by the increased occurrence of westerly and southerly geostrophic flow. Copyright © 2005 Royal Meteorological Society.


Recent Mild and Wet Years in Relation to Long Observation Records and Future Climate Change in Sweden

July 2004

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59 Reads

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47 Citations

AMBIO A Journal of the Human Environment

Recent mild and wet years in Sweden were compared with long observation series of temperature, precipitation and runoff. Spatial average series for northern and southern Sweden were constructed and analyzed for the period 1901-2002. Precipitation increased considerably during the period, whereas temperature and runoff increases were weaker. On average, for the whole country, the differences between the period 1991-2002 and 1901-1990 were +0.7 degrees C for temperature, +11% in precipitation and +7% in runoff. The differences in temperature and precipitation, but not runoff, were significant at the 5% level. However, the 1930s were equally mild, and the runoff was almost as high in the 1920s. The characteristic feature of the past decade is the combination of high temperature, precipitation and runoff. The deviation between the most recent decade and the preceding years is consistent with climate scenario projections for Sweden, but there are also differences in the seasonal pattern.


Citations (33)


... On the other hand, the detection of breaks is easier than the detection of other type inhomogeneities, therefore breaks are also used as a simplified model structure of other type inhomogeneities. Indeed, the correct inhomogeneity detection is generally a difficult task even when all the inhomogeneities are breaks, since no time series can be presumed to be fully homogeneous, and long climate records usually include multiple inhomogeneities (Auer et al., 2005;Moberg & Alexandersson, 1997). In the approximately one century long history of homogenization, the inhomogeneity detection part of the homogenization procedures have received the most attention, but the accuracy of homogenization results notably depends also on the other steps of the homogenization. ...

Reference:

ANOVA (Benova) correction in relative homogenization: Why it is indispensable
HOMOGENIZATION OF SWEDISH TEMPERATURE DATA. PART II: HOMOGENIZED GRIDDED AIR TEMPERATURE COMPARED WITH A SUBSET OF GLOBAL GRIDDED AIR TEMPERATURE SINCE 1861
  • Citing Article
  • January 1997

... The presented results show that the consideration of such seasonal variations tends to improve the accuracy of monthly values, and the joint consideration of the dependence of inhomogeneity biases on quantiles of the PDF and seasonality may improve further the data accuracy. Another issue for studying in the future is the possible inclusion of breaks for section mean variances [54,60,61] in HPDTS. The present form of HPDTS presumes that the significant breaks for homogenizing probability distribution have already been detected by the step function fitting steps of the ACMANTv5.3 ...

HOMOGENIZATION OF SWEDISH TEMPERATURE DATA. PART I: HOMOGENEITY TEST FOR LINEAR TRENDS
  • Citing Article
  • January 1997

... In addition to these, increasing temperatures, longer dry spells and more frequent and intense rains put crop and livestock production in Tanzania at risk [28]. A prolonged dry spell in MAM has been significant increase as compared to the OND rain season [29][30][31][32]. Little change in overall rainfall; slight decrease from 1961-2013, mainly from March to June [33]. ...

Observed Climate Variability and Change

... The lower SD values over the city highlight the persisting temperature pattern over the region and the limited reach/occurrence of hot and cold waves over this region. The impact of extreme cold and heat waves causes the SD values (T max and T min ) to be higher in the corresponding seasons over northern and central India(Bhattacharya et al., 2023;Pai et al. ...

Observed Climate Variability and Change
  • Citing Book
  • January 2001

... Currently, many indicators of seasonality changes are based on temperature-related impacts on ecosystems, and hence they provide estimates of changes in the seasonal timing of the growing season. Minimum, mean, and maximum daily temperature have been taken as the most important temperature characteristics in the analysis of climate change (Moberg et al., 2006;Cohen et al., 2014;65 Cassou and Cattiaux, 2016). Various indices have been used in the literature to divide seasons, such as those based on temperature Hekmatzadeh et al., 2020) and phenology (Cleland et al., 2007;Schwartz and Crawford, 2001;Peng et al., 2013), or moving average smoothing techniques to identify the time that temperature rises above or fall below long-term mean (Blöschl et al., 2017;Park et al., 2021), or defined thresholds such as the 75th and 25th percentile to identify the coldest and warmest periods (Zschenderlein et al., 2019). ...

Indices for daily temperature and precipitation extremes in Europe analyzed for the period 1901–2000
  • Citing Article
  • November 2006

... The homogenisation of climatological observations is an ongoing task at SMHI (Joelsson et al., 2022(Joelsson et al., , 2023. Räisänen and Alexandersson (2003) conclude that the 1991-2000 decade was warm and wet in Sweden, which has a 93% probability to be related to anthropogenic climate change. These results are consistent with Fig. (8), which also show that the warm and wet trend has continued over the 2000-2020 period. ...

A probabilistic view on recent and near future climate change in Sweden
  • Citing Article
  • March 2003

Tellus

... Today several reconstructions of the Weichselian Ice Sheet are available, both regional models and as part of global models (e.g. Peltier, 2004;Lambeck et al., 2010;Näslund, 2010). The ice sheet properties that are most important for GIA studies are the areal extent and the distribution of ice thickness. ...

Climate and climate related issues for the safety assessment SR-Site

... In addition, a path between the Baltic Sea and White Sea, through Lake Ladoga, appeared and disappeared multiple times during this period [117,118]. At least, during the Eemian interglacial period (115-130 ka ago), all this area was covered by a single sea basin, desalinated due to river inflow [118,119]. It is an outstanding question of when isolated regions were completely covered or not by ice, but theoretically they could be inhabited by isolated populations of seals. ...

Climate and climate related issues for the safety assessment SR-Can

... A long collection of weather data is a necessary but not sufficient condition to identify climate trends: time series need to be homogeneous, that is, climate signals need to be isolated from the effect of changes in instrumentation or the environment around the stations (Easterling and Peterson, 1995;Alexandersson, 2001;Böhm et al., 2001;Auer et al., 2005;Maugeri et al., 2006). When available, metadata serve precisely to this purpose, giving information about the way the data were collected, the used instruments, and the environment around the stations. ...

Homogenisation of Climate Data, Difficult but Necessary
  • Citing Chapter
  • January 2001

... They further emphasize that the baroclinic structure of these events plays an important role in developing cold spells of the Siberian continent (Takaya and Nakamura, 2005a). More recently, Sillmann and Croci-Maspoli (2009) combine the blocking events, detected by the algorithm of Schwierz et al. (2004), with extreme monthly indices, such as the minimum of the minimum 2-m temperature as described by Frich et al. (1996Frich et al. ( , 2002. Based on a correlation analysis they found that the connection between blocking events and cold winter temperature is robust also in a future climate state. ...

North Atlantic Climatological Dataset (NACD Version l)-Final Report
  • Citing Technical Report
  • January 1996