In order to understand and quantify the uncertainties in projections and physics of a climate model, a collection of climate simulations (an ensemble) is typically used. Given the high-dimensionality of the input space of a climate model, as well as the complex, nonlinear relationships between the climate variables, a large ensemble is often required to accurately assess these uncertainties. If only a small number of climate variables are of interest at a specified spatial and temporal scale, the computational and storage expenses can be substantially reduced by training a statistical model on a small ensemble. The statistical model then acts as a stochastic generator (SG) able to simulate a large ensemble, given a small training ensemble. Previous work on SGs has focused on modeling and simulating individual climate variables (e.g., surface temperature, wind speed) independently. Here, we introduce a SG that jointly simulates three key climate variables. The model is based on a multistage spectral approach that allows for inference of more than 80 million data points for a nonstationary global model, by conducting inference in stages and leveraging large-scale parallelization across many processors. We demonstrate the feasibility of jointly simulating climate variables by training the SG on five ensemble members from a large ensemble project and assess the SG simulations by comparing them to the ensemble members not used in training. Supplementary materials accompanying this paper appear online.
CITATION STYLE
Edwards, M., Castruccio, S., & Hammerling, D. (2019). A Multivariate Global Spatiotemporal Stochastic Generator for Climate Ensembles. Journal of Agricultural, Biological, and Environmental Statistics, 24(3), 464–483. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13253-019-00352-8
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