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Variability conceals emerging trend in 100yr projections of UK local hourly rainfall extremes

Elizabeth Kendon, Erich Fischer, Chris J. Short

2023Nature Communications107 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Extreme precipitation is projected to intensify with warming, but how this will manifest locally through time is uncertain. Here, we exploit an ensemble of convection-permitting transient simulations to examine the emerging signal in local hourly rainfall extremes over 100-years. We show rainfall events in the UK exceeding 20 mm/h that can cause flash floods are 4-times as frequent by 2070s under high emissions; in contrast, a coarser resolution regional model shows only a 2.6x increase. With every degree of regional warming, the intensity of extreme downpours increases by 5-15%. Regional records of local hourly rainfall occur 40% more often than in the absence of warming. However, these changes are not realised as a smooth trend. Instead, as a result of internal variability, extreme years with record-breaking events may be followed by multiple decades with no new local rainfall records. The tendency for extreme years to cluster poses key challenges for communities trying to adapt.

Topics & Concepts

ClimatologyEnvironmental sciencePrecipitationGlobal warmingExploitClimate changeFlash floodExtreme weatherMeteorologyGeographyComputer scienceGeologyOceanographyArchaeologyComputer securityFlood mythClimate variability and modelsMeteorological Phenomena and SimulationsHydrology and Drought Analysis
Variability conceals emerging trend in 100yr projections of UK local hourly rainfall extremes | Litcius