Future Climate Projections for South Florida: Improving the Accuracy of Air Temperature and Precipitation Extremes With a Hybrid Statistical Bias Correction Technique

Author:

Rahimi Leila1,Hoque Mushfiqul1,Ahmadisharaf Ebrahim1ORCID,Alamdari Nasrin1,Misra Vasubandhu2ORCID,Maran Ana Carolina3,Kao Shih‐Chieh4ORCID,AghaKouchak Amir56ORCID,Talchabhadel Rocky7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Resilient Infrastructure and Disaster Response (RIDER) Center FAMU‐FSU College of Engineering Tallahassee FL USA

2. Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science Florida State University Tallahassee FL USA

3. South Florida Water Management District West Palm Beach FL USA

4. Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge TN USA

5. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of California Irvine Irvine CA USA

6. United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health Hamilton ON Canada

7. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Jackson State University Jackson MS USA

Abstract

AbstractProjecting future climate variables is essential for comprehending the potential impacts on hydroclimatic hazards like floods and droughts. Evaluating these impacts is challenging due to the coarse spatial resolution of global climate models (GCMs); therefore, bias correction is widely used. Here, we applied two statistical methods—standard empirical quantile mapping (EQM) and a hybrid approach, EQM with linear correction (EQM‐LIN)—to bias correct precipitation and air temperature simulated by nine GCMs. We used historical observations from 20 weather stations across South Florida to project future climate under three shared socioeconomic pathways (SSPs). Compared to the EQM, the hybrid EQM‐LIN method improved R2 of daily quantiles by up to 30% over the historical period and improved MAE up to 70% in months that contain most extreme values. Projected extreme precipitation at the weather stations showed that, compared to the EQM‐LIN, the EQM method underestimates the high quantiles by up to 26% in SSP585. The projected changes in annual maximum precipitation from historical period (1985–2014) to near future (2040–2069) and far future (2070–2100) were between 2% and 16% across the study area. Projected future precipitation suggested a slight decrease during summer but an increase in fall. This, along with rising summer temperatures, suggested that South Florida can experience rapid oscillations from warmer summers and increased flooding in fall under future climate. Additionally, our comparative analyses with globally and nationally downscaled studies showed that such coarse scale studies do not represent the climatic extremes well, particularly for high quantile precipitation.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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