Author:
Gaur Abhishek,Lacasse Michael,Armstrong Marianne
Abstract
Buildings and homes in Canada will be exposed to unprecedented climatic conditions in the future as a consequence of global climate change. To improve the climate resiliency of existing and new buildings, it is important to evaluate their performance over current and projected future climates. Hygrothermal and whole building simulation models, which are important tools for assessing performance, require continuous climate records at high temporal frequencies of a wide range of climate variables for input into the kinds of models that relate to solar radiation, cloud-cover, wind, humidity, rainfall, temperature, and snow-cover. In this study, climate data that can be used to assess the performance of building envelopes under current and projected future climates, concurrent with 2 °C and 3.5 °C increases in global temperatures, are generated for 11 major Canadian cities. The datasets capture the internal variability of the climate as they are comprised of 15 realizations of the future climate generated by dynamically downscaling future projections from the CanESM2 global climate model and thereafter bias-corrected with reference to observations. An assessment of the bias-corrected projections suggests, as a consequence of global warming, future increases in the temperatures and precipitation, and decreases in the snow-cover and wind-speed for all cities.
Subject
Information Systems and Management,Computer Science Applications,Information Systems
Reference44 articles.
1. Detection and Attribution of Climate Change: From Global to Regional;Bindoff,2013
2. Long-term Climate Change: Projections, Commitments and Irreversibility;Collins,2013
3. Canadian Communities’ Guidebook for Adaptation to Climate Change: Including an Approach to Generate Mitigation Co-Benefits in the Context of Sustainable Development;Bizikova,2008
4. Future moisture loads for building facades in Sweden: Climate change and wind-driven rain;Nik;Build. Environ.,2015
Cited by
53 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献