Attribution of the Record‐Breaking Extreme Precipitation Events in July 2021 Over Central and Eastern China to Anthropogenic Climate Change

Author:

Wang Liangyi12,Gu Xihui13456ORCID,Slater Louise J.7ORCID,Lai Yangchen2,Zheng Yanhui89ORCID,Gong Jie10,Dembélé Moctar711ORCID,Tosunoğlu Fatih12,Liu Jianyu13,Zhang Xiang14ORCID,Kong Dongdong16,Li Jianfeng2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Atmospheric Science School of Environmental Studies China University of Geosciences Wuhan China

2. Department of Geography Hong Kong Baptist University Hong Kong China

3. Guangdong‐Hong Kong Joint Laboratory for Water Security Beijing Normal University at Zhuhai Zhuhai China

4. SongShan Laboratory Zhengzhou China

5. State Key Laboratory of Water Resources and Hydropower Engineering Science Wuhan University Wuhan China

6. Centre for Severe Weather and Climate and Hydro‐geological Hazards Wuhan China

7. School of Geography and the Environment University of Oxford Oxford UK

8. State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of Integrated Surface Water‐Groundwater Pollution Control School of Environmental Science and Engineering Southern University of Science and Technology Shenzhen China

9. Guangzhou Franzero Water Technology Co., Ltd. Guangzhou China

10. Institute of Geological Survey China University of Geoscience Wuhan China

11. International Water Management Institute (IWMI) Accra Ghana

12. Department of Civil Engineering Erzurum Technical University Erzurum Turkey

13. Laboratory of Critical Zone Evolution School of Geography and Information Engineering China University of Geosciences Wuhan China

14. National Engineering Research Center of Geographic Information System School of Geography and Information Engineering China University of Geosciences Wuhan China

Abstract

AbstractIn July 2021, Typhoon In‐Fa produced record‐breaking extreme precipitation events (hereafter referred to as the 2021 EPEs) in central and eastern China, and caused serious socioeconomic losses and casualties. However, it is still unknown whether the 2021 EPEs can be attributed to anthropogenic climate change (ACC) and how the occurrence probabilities of precipitation events of a similar magnitude might evolve in the future. The 2021 EPEs in central (eastern) China occurred in the context of no linear trend (a significantly increasing trend at a rate of 4.44%/decade) in the region‐averaged Rx5day (summer maximum 5‐day accumulated precipitation) percentage precipitation anomaly (PPA), indicating that global warming might have no impact on the 2021 EPE in central China but might have impacted the 2021 EPE in eastern China by increasing the long‐term trend of EPEs. Using the scaled generalized extreme value distribution, we detected a slightly negative (significantly positive) association of the Rx5day PPA time series in central (eastern) China with the global mean temperature anomaly, suggesting that global warming might have no (a detectable) contribution to the changes in occurrence probability of precipitation extremes like the 2021 EPEs in central (eastern) China. Historical attributions (1961–2020) showed that the likelihood of the 2021 EPE in central/eastern China decreased/increased by approximately +47% (−23% to +89%)/+55% (−45% to +201%) due to ACC. By the end of the 21st century, the likelihood of precipitation extremes similar to the 2021 EPE in central/eastern China under SSP585 is 14 (9–19)/15 (9–20) times higher than under historical climate conditions.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),General Environmental Science

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