Constraining Projected Changes in Rare Intense Precipitation Events Across Global Land Regions

Author:

Li Chao1ORCID,Sun Qiaohong2,Wang Jianyu34,Liang Yongxiao5ORCID,Zwiers Francis W.26,Zhang Xuebin6,Li Tong26

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Geographic Information Science Ministry of Education | School of Geographic Sciences East China Normal University Shanghai China

2. Key Laboratory of Meteorological Disaster Ministry of Education (KLME) | Collaborative Innovation Center on Forecast and Evaluation of Meteorological Disasters (CIC‐FEMD) Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology Nanjing China

3. State Key Laboratory of Severe Weather Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences Beijing China

4. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

5. Climate Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada Toronto ON Canada

6. Pacific Climate Impacts Consortium University of Victoria Victoria CO Canada

Abstract

AbstractRare precipitation events with return periods of multiple decades to hundreds of years are particularly damaging to natural and societal systems. Projections of such rare, damaging precipitation events in the future climate are, however, subject to large inter‐model variations. We show that a substantial portion of these differences can be ascribed to the projected warming uncertainty, and can be robustly reduced by using the warming observed during recent decades as an observational constraint, implemented either by directly constraining the projections with the observed warming or by conditioning them on constrained warming projections, as verified by extensive model‐based cross‐validation. The temperature constraint reduces >40% of the warming‐induced uncertainty in the projected intensification of future rare daily precipitation events for a climate that is 2°C warmer than preindustrial across most regions. This uncertainty reduction together with validation of the reliability of the projections should permit more confident adaptation planning at regional levels.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

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