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The contribution of anthropogenic influence to more anomalous extreme precipitation in Europe

Hossein Tabari, Kaveh Madani, Patrick Willems

2020Environmental Research Letters43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Anthropogenic influences can modulate the low-frequency variability of extreme precipitation and increase the likelihood of flooding events. It is not, however, clear how much and in what manner the low-frequency variability has changed in recent decades as global warming has intensified. Here, we investigate the contribution of anthropogenic influences to the time evolution of extreme precipitation anomalies in different seasons using Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) and CMIP5 model simulations and observations over Europe. Our results show a latitudinal dependence of changes in extreme precipitation anomalies for all seasons due to anthropogenic impacts. While the contribution of anthropogenic influences to extreme precipitation anomalies at low latitudes (<50 ) is less than 8% in all seasons, it goes up to 26% and 41% at mid (50 -60 ) and high (>60 ) latitudes. Without the offsetting effect of anthropogenic aerosols, anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases alone should have produced larger anomalies than observed. For all seasons, the more extreme the precipitation, the larger the anthropogenic influences.

Topics & Concepts

Coupled model intercomparison projectPrecipitationEnvironmental scienceClimatologyGreenhouse gasAtmospheric sciencesLatitudeClimate modelClimate changeFlooding (psychology)Global warmingGeologyMeteorologyOceanographyGeographyPsychologyGeodesyPsychotherapistClimate variability and modelsMeteorological Phenomena and SimulationsHydrology and Drought Analysis
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