Litcius/Paper detail

Impact of Urbanization on the Simulation of Extreme Rainfall in the City of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia

Thang M. Luong, Hari Prasad Dasari, Ibrahim Hoteit

2020Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The city of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, is characterized by a hot and arid desert climate. On occasion, however, extreme precipitation events have led to flooding that caused extensive damage to human life and infrastructure. This study investigates the effect of incorporating an urban canopy model and urban land cover when simulating severe weather events over Jeddah using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model at a convective-permitting scale (1.5-km resolution). Two experiments were conducted for 10 heavy rainfall events associated with the dominant large-scale patterns favoring convection over Jeddah: (i) an “urban” experiment that included the urban canopy model and modern-day land cover and (ii) a “desert” experiment that replaced the city area with its presettlement, natural land cover. The results suggest that urbanization plays an important role in modifying rainfall around city area. The urban experiment enhances the amount of rainfall by 26% on average over the Jeddah city area relative to the desert experiment in these extreme events. The changes in model-simulated precipitation are primarily tied to a nocturnal heat-island effect that modifies the planetary boundary layer and atmospheric instability of the convective events.

Topics & Concepts

Weather Research and Forecasting ModelPrecipitationEnvironmental scienceUrbanizationClimatologyUrban heat islandAridFlash floodAtmospheric instabilityLand coverMeteorologyGeographyFlood mythLand useGeologyWind speedCivil engineeringEconomic growthArchaeologyEngineeringPaleontologyEconomicsUrban Heat Island MitigationMeteorological Phenomena and SimulationsClimate variability and models