Quantifying the effect of interannual ocean variability on the attribution of extreme climate events to human influence
Mark D. Risser, Daithi A. Stone, Christopher J. Paciorek and, Michael F. Wehner, Oliver Angelil

TL;DR
This paper investigates how interannual ocean variability influences the estimation of human impact on extreme weather events, highlighting the importance of considering ocean state variability in attribution studies.
Contribution
It introduces a methodology to quantify year-to-year variability in anthropogenic attribution of extreme events using large ensembles of atmospheric simulations.
Findings
Quantifies the magnitude of year-to-year variability in attribution estimates.
Shows that ignoring ocean variability can lead to overconfidence in human influence assessments.
Provides regional case studies illustrating the variability in attribution results.
Abstract
In recent years, the climate change research community has become highly interested in describing the anthropogenic influence on extreme weather events, commonly termed "event attribution." Limitations in the observational record and in computational resources motivate the use of uncoupled, atmosphere/land-only climate models with prescribed ocean conditions run over a short period, leading up to and including an event of interest. In this approach, large ensembles of high-resolution simulations can be generated under factual observed conditions and counterfactual conditions that might have been observed in the absence of human interference; these can be used to estimate the change in probability of the given event due to anthropogenic influence. However, using a prescribed ocean state ignores the possibility that estimates of attributable risk might be a function of the ocean state.…
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