This site requires Cookies enabled in your browser for login.
WaterNet Home
WaterNet
for
pour le
Canada
Menu
WaterNet
Home
GWFO
Home
Master
List
Data
Centre
Collections
X
Defaults
Select All
Websites
X
Global Water Futures Observatories (GWFO) Global Water Futures (GWF) Global Institute for Water Security (GIWS) International Network of Alpine Research Catchment Hydrology
Legacy Research Programs
X
Changing Cold Regions Network (CCRN) Drought Research Initiative (DRI) International Network of Alpine Research Catchment Hydrology (Legacy Site) Improving Processes & Parameterization for Prediction in Cold Regions Hydrology (IP3) The Mackenzie Global Energy and Water Cycle Experiment (GEWEX) Study (MAGS)
Legacy sites
Map
Utilities
X
Account Settings Metadata Editor Record List Alias List Editor
Data Centre
Data Type Editor
. . .
X
Clear
Select All
Advanced Search
Related items loading ...
Fetching Chart ...
Project Information
Project Name
SDEPFC: Short-Duration Extreme Precipitation in Future Climate
Led by
Lead 1
Lead 2
Lead 3
Lead 4
Name
Yanping Li
Institution
University of Saskatchewan
Role
PI
Contact Information
yanping.li@usask.ca
Classification (e.g., "GWF Pillar 3", "CCRN", etc.)
GWF Pillar 1
Project Websites
https://gwf.usask.ca/projects-facilities/all-projects/p1-extreme-precipitation.php
Project Description
Understanding of the physical processes affecting short‐duration (less than 24 hours) extreme precipitation and their possible changes in the warming world is important to the accurate projection of precipitation. However, most global and regional climate models do not directly simulate the processes that produce extreme precipitation due to their coarse resolutions and this hinders the proper interpretation of the precipitation projections produced by these models. Such shortcomings can be addressed by making extensive use of a convection‐permitting modeling tool running in a pseudo‐global warming mode, and comparing it with existing simulations by global and regional climate models. This project addresses the following four questions: i) Does temperature scaling work at convective‐permitting resolutions for short‐duration local precipitation extremes? ii) How will the characteristics of mesoscale convective systems (MCSs) such as the precipitation intensity, size, and life‐span of storms change in the future? iii) What are the underlying physical processes that result in changes in MCSs and storm properties? iv) How do extreme precipitation features scale across resolution from GCMs to RCMs to convective permitting WRF? This project aims to increase our understanding of the physical soundness of future precipitation projections by climate models, thereby providing a scientific foundation for the proper use of model projections that many prediction models used by GWF depend on.
Current Status of this Project
○ Planned
◉ In Progress
○ Abandoned
○ Complete
© 2026 - WaterNet Version 2026-06-01
Global Water Futures Observatories
Powered by
G W F Net
T-2021-11-22-F1gfgStzqQ0yfDtmqpIYwvQ Project 1.2