A warmer world: average monthly maximum temperatures for July, 2100, according to NASA’s new climate projections.
Using multiple climate models and hundreds of terabytes of data, NASA has projected global temperatures and rainfall around the world from 2050 until 2100.
The result: Scientists and policymakers can now pull up information that simulates how individual cities and towns may fare on a given day in the distant future. The information could be used to better cope with drought, floods, heat waves and other extreme weather linked to climate change.
The maps were released as part of a White House push to promote adaptation in developing nations.
Policymakers, however, are most interested in regional predictions.
So, NASA scientists decided to provide this information. They trained the supercomputer's algorithm to recognize differences between the CMIP-5 models and real-world observations. Then, as the models projected out into the future, the computer corrected the resulting simulations down to 25-kilometer resolution.
NASA simulated the changes assuming that humans will continue to emit carbon at present-day rates (a scenario scientists call RCP 4.5) and under an "extreme" scenario where nations increase their emissions (RCP 8.5).
Under the RCP 8.5 scenario, the July temperature maximums in 2100 across the most densely populated parts of the globe appear to be well above 35 degrees Celsius (95 degrees Fahrenheit).
NASA now has 11 terabytes of this data available for any scientist or policymaker to download. The data set provides daily high and low temperatures, as well as rainfall, the world over. People can also access the information on Amazon Web Services without downloading the data set.
"This is a fundamental dataset for climate research and assessment with a wide range of applications," Ramakrishna Nemani, NEX project scientist at Ames, said in a statement.
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