Litcius/Paper detail

Extreme Water Vapor Transport During the March 2021 Sydney Floods in the Context of Climate Projections

Kimberley J. Reid, Travis O’Brien, Andrew D. King, Todd P. Lane

2021Geophysical Research Letters33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract During March 2021, large regions of Eastern Australia experienced prolonged heavy rainfall and extensive flooding. The maximum daily mean column integrated water vapor transport (IVT) over Sydney during this event was within the top 0.3% of all days since 1980, and the 10‐day mean IVT was in the top 0.2%. In this study, we have examined the change in frequency of extreme IVT events over Sydney in 16 climate models from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 6 under two Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSP245 and SSP585). Generalized Extreme Value modeling was used to further analyze the change in frequency of extreme IVT events. We found the probability of long duration high IVT events is projected to increase by 80% at the end of the century, but the future change in IVT is correlated to the rate of global and regional warming in each model.

Topics & Concepts

Context (archaeology)Flooding (psychology)Environmental scienceClimatologyCoupled model intercomparison projectClimate changeClimate modelFlood mythExtreme value theoryExtreme weatherAtmospheric sciencesMeteorologyGeographyGeologyStatisticsMathematicsOceanographyPsychologyPsychotherapistArchaeologyClimate variability and modelsFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementHydrology and Drought Analysis