A large-sample investigation into uncertain climate change impacts on high flows across Great Britain
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Published:2022-11-07
Issue:21
Volume:26
Page:5535-5554
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ISSN:1607-7938
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Container-title:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Lane Rosanna A.ORCID, Coxon GemmaORCID, Freer Jim, Seibert JanORCID, Wagener Thorsten
Abstract
Abstract. Climate change may significantly increase flood risk globally, but there are
large uncertainties in both future climatic changes and how these propagate
into changing river flows. Here, the impact of climate change on the
magnitude and frequency of high flows is analysed for Great Britain (GB) to
provide the first spatially consistent GB projections to include both
climate ensembles and hydrological model parameter uncertainties. We use the
latest high-resolution (12 km) regional climate model ensemble from the UK
Climate Projections (UKCP18). These projections are based on a
perturbed-physics ensemble of 12 regional climate model simulations and
allow exploration of climate model uncertainty beyond the variability caused
by the use of different models. We model 346 larger (>144 km2) catchments across GB using the DECIPHeR hydrological modelling
framework. Generally, results indicated an increase in the magnitude and
frequency of high flows (Q10, Q1, and annual maximum) along the western coast of GB in the future (2050–2075), with increases in annual maximum flows of up
to 65 % for western Scotland. In contrast, median flows (Q50) were projected to decrease across GB. Even when using an ensemble based on a single regional climate model (RCM) structure, all flow projections contained large uncertainties. While the RCM
parameters were the largest source of uncertainty overall, hydrological
modelling uncertainties were considerable in eastern and south-eastern England. Regional variations in flow projections were found to relate to (i)
differences in climatic change and (ii) catchment conditions during the
baseline period as characterised by the runoff coefficient (mean discharge
divided by mean precipitation). Importantly, increased heavy-precipitation
events (defined by an increase in 99th percentile precipitation) did not
always result in increased flood flows for catchments with low runoff
coefficients, highlighting the varying factors leading to changes in high
flows. These results provide a national overview of climate change impacts
on high flows across GB, which will inform climate change adaptation, and
highlight the impact of hydrological model parameter uncertainties when
modelling climate change impact on high flows.
Funder
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
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