The 2018 west-central European drought projected in a warmer climate: how much drier can it get?
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Published:2023-05-26
Issue:5
Volume:23
Page:1921-1946
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ISSN:1684-9981
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Container-title:Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Aalbers Emma E., van Meijgaard Erik, Lenderink Geert, de Vries HylkeORCID, van den Hurk Bart J. J. M.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Projections of changes in extreme droughts under future
climate conditions are associated with large uncertainties, owing to the
complex genesis of droughts and large model uncertainty in the atmospheric
dynamics. In this study we investigate the impact of global warming on soil
moisture drought severity in west-central Europe by employing pseudo global
warming (PGW) experiments, which project the 1980–2020 period in a globally
warmer world. The future analogues of present-day drought episodes allow for
investigation of changes in drought severity conditional on the historic
day-to-day evolution of the atmospheric circulation. The 2018 west-central European drought is the most severe drought in the
1980–2020 reference period in this region. Under 1.5,
2 and 3 ∘C global warming, this drought episode
experiences strongly enhanced summer temperatures but a fairly modest soil
moisture drying response compared to the change in climatology. This is
primarily because evaporation is already strongly moisture-constrained
during present-day conditions, limiting the increase in evaporation and thus
the modulation of the temperature response under PGW. Increasing
precipitation in winter, spring and autumn limits or prevents an earlier
drought onset and duration. Nevertheless, the drought severity, defined as
the cumulative soil moisture deficit volume, increases considerably, with
20 % to 39 % under 2 ∘C warming. The extreme drought frequency in the 1980–2020 period strongly increases
under 2 ∘C warming. Several years without noticeable droughts
under present-day conditions show very strong drying and warming. This
results in an increase in 2003-like drought occurrences, compounding with
local summer temperature increases considerably above 2 ∘C. Even without taking into account a (potentially large) dynamical response to
climate change, drought risk in west-central Europe is strongly enhanced
under global warming. Owing to increases in drought frequency, severity and
compounding heat, a reduction in recovery times between drought episodes is
expected to occur. Our physical climate storyline provides evidence
complementing conventional large-ensemble approaches and is intended to
contribute to the formulation of effective adaptation strategies.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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