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Annual Count of Icing Days - Projections
OwnerMet Office - view all
Update frequencyunknown
Last updatedover 1 year ago
Overview

Annual Count of Icing Days (annual number of days where the maximum daily temperature is below 0°C), projections for a range of future warming levels from UKCP18. Provided on a 12km BNG grid.This metric is similar to frost days, but measures more severe cold weather impacts as it is defined as a day where the maximum daily temperature is below 0°C. In other words, the temperature does not rise above 0°C for the whole day. By definition, the daily minimum will also be below 0°C so all icing days are also counted as frost days. On an icing day, more ice will form, having a greater impact than other frost days. Frost days and Icing Days have large negative impacts on crops, transportation, and energy demand.This data contains a field for each warming level. They are named 'Icing Days', the warming level, and 'upper' 'median' or 'lower' as per the description below. E.g. 'Icing Days 2.5 median' is the median value for the 2.5°C projection. Decimal points are included in field aliases but not field names e.g. 'Icing Days 2.5 median' is 'IcingDays_25_median'. Data defaults to displaying 'Icing Days 2.0°C median' values, use 'change style' to display other values.The warming levels used are 1.5°C, 2.0°C, 2.5°C, 3.0°C, 4.0°C, and two baselines are also provided for 1981-2000 (corresponding to 0.51°C warming) and 2000-2017 (corresponding to 0.835°C warming).What is the data?The data is from the UKCP18 regional projections using the RCP8.5 scenario. Rather than giving projections for a specific date under different scenarios, one scenario is used and projections are given at the different warming levels. So this data shows the expected number of Icing Days should these warming levels be reached, at the time that the warming level is reached.For full details, see 'Future Changes to high impact weather in the UK'. HM Hanlon, D Bernie, G Carigi and JA Lowe. Climatic Change, 166, 50 (2021) https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-021-03100-5What do the 'median', 'upper', and 'lower' values mean?This scenario is run as 12 separate ensemble members. To select which ensemble members to use, a single value was taken from each ensemble member - the mean of a 21yr period centred on the year the warming level was reached. They were then ranked in order from lowest to highest.The 'lower' fields are the second lowest ranked ensemble member.The 'higher' fields are the second highest ranked ensemble member.The 'median' fields are the median average of all ensemble members.This gives a median average value, and a spread of the ensemble members indicating the level of uncertainty in the projections.This dataset forms part of the Met Office’s Climate Data Portal service. This service is currently in Beta. We would like your help to further develop our service, please send us feedback via the site - https://climate-themetoffice.hub.arcgis.com/

Met OfficeUKUKCPUKCP18annualclimatecountdaysicingicing daysprojectionstemperature
Additional Information
KeyValue
dcat_issued2022-04-25T14:28:12.000Z
dcat_modified2022-09-01T11:54:38.262Z
dcat_publisher_nameMet Office
guidhttps://www.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=3b1ad4246c69447b811a21e241aa2612&sublayer=223
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