The most comprehensive study of climate change in LA to date, the Climate Change in the Los Angeles Region Project was conducted by Center for Climate Science Faculty Director Alex Hall and his research group between 2010 and 2015. Dr. Hall and his team developed a novel method for bringing global climate model projections to high spatial resolution, creating neighborhood-by-neighborhood projections of future climate over the greater Los Angeles region under different scenarios of greenhouse gas emissions.

Context

People making decisions about adapting to future climate change impacts and preventing further climate change need to know how climate change will affect their communities. But until recently, the most robust climate change research has focused on large regions the globe, and information about climate change in our own backyards has been hard to come by.

The scientific challenge

The best tools scientists have for projecting future climate are global climate models, state-of-the-art computer models that simulate the climate system. While global climate models are incredibly useful for understanding climate change on global and continental scales, they are too low in spatial resolution to help us understand climate impacts on smaller scales, particularly in areas like the Los Angeles region, whose complex topography creates microclimates that a global climate model cannot account for. Various techniques exist to “downscale” global climate models to finer spatial resolutions, but they have limitations: Those that are physically realistic are highly computationally expensive, limiting how many different global climate model outcomes can be considered in any particular study, whereas those that are computationally efficient are not necessarily physically realistic.

The breakthrough

For this project, Dr. Hall and his team developed a novel “hybrid downscaling” technique that combines the strengths of the various downscaling methods while avoiding their limitations. The researchers used this technique to downscale about three dozen latest-generation global climate models at 1.2-mile resolution over the greater Los Angeles region. Focusing on two future periods, 2041–2060 and 2081–2100, they analyzed changes in various aspects of climate—temperature, extreme heat, precipitation, snowfall, and runoff from precipitation in the region’s mountains—under two different scenarios of greenhouse gas emissions. The “business as usual” scenario represents a continued rise in emissions of heat-trapping greenhouse gases, and the “mitigation” scenario represents aggressive action to curb emissions over the coming decades.

Key findings

At mid-century under the Business As Usual scenario, average temperatures over the region’s land areas rise by 4.3°F, compared with a reference period of 1981–2000.

Warming is not uniform across the LA region. Valleys and inland areas warm more than areas near the coast.

The number of days hotter than 95°F increases across the region, but to a greater extent in the interior compared with coastal areas.

At mid-century, temperature changes in the Mitigation scenario are 70% of those in Business As Usual scenario. That warming is doesn’t differ greatly between the two scenarios means significant effects of climate change are inevitable.

At the end of the century, there’s a much larger difference between the two scenarios. In the Mitigation scenario, temperatures level off, and by end-century, average temperatures are about 3 ° F warmer than in 1981–2000. Under Business As Usual, end-century average temperatures will be 8.2 ° F warmer than they were in 1981–2000. This stark difference indicates that global action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions would have significant benefits.

F warmer than in 1981–2000. Under Business As Usual, end-century average temperatures will be 8.2 F warmer than they were in 1981–2000. This stark difference indicates that global action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions would have significant benefits. Average annual precipitation totals do not change significantly in either time period or scenario. (Note: Further studies are required for a holistic analysis of precipitation changes. In California, precipitation varies greatly from year to year, so changes to the average are just one part of the story. Other projects by the Center for Climate Science are assessing changes to the distribution of precipitation events and the effects of climate change on drought.)

Because temperature increases cause a greater share of winter precipitation to fall as rain instead of snow, snowfall in the region’s mountains will be reduced. At mid-century under Business As Usual, elevations below about 6,500 feet lose half their snowfall compared with 1981–2000, while higher elevations lose up to 30%. At the end of the century under Business As Usual, lower elevations stand to lose 80% of the snowfall they received in 1981–2000.

More about the project

The Climate Change in the Los Angeles Region project was commissioned by the City of Los Angeles in partnership with the Los Angeles Regional Collaborative for Climate Action, with support from the US Department of Energy. Additional funding was provided by the National Science Foundation and the Southwest Climate Science Center.