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Publication Additional Information Download
Publication Type
Journal Article
Authorship
Sun, Q., Zhang, X., Zwiers, F.W., Yan, J.
Title
Quantifying the human influence on the intensity of extreme 1- and 5-day precipitation amounts at global, continental, and regional scales
Year
2021
Publication Outlet
Journal of Climate, 35, 195-210
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-21-0028.1
Citation
Sun, Q., Zhang, X., Zwiers, F.W., Yan, J.: Quantifying the human influence on the intensity of extreme 1- and 5-day precipitation amounts at global, continental, and regional scales. Journal of Climate, 35, 195-210, https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-21-0028.1 , 2021
Abstract
This study provides a comprehensive analysis of the human contribution to the observed intensification of precipitation extremes at different spatial scales. We consider the annual maxima of the logarithm of 1-day (Rx1day) and 5-day (Rx5day) precipitation amounts for 1950–2014 over the global land area, four continents, and several regions, and compare observed changes with expected responses to external forcings as simulated by CanESM2 in a large-ensemble experiment and by multiple models from phase 6 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6). We use a novel detection and attribution analysis method that is applied directly to station data in the areas considered without prior processing such as gridding, spatial or temporal dimension reduction, or transformation to unitless indices and uses climate models only to obtain estimates of the space–time pattern of extreme precipitation response to external forcing. The influence of anthropogenic forcings on extreme precipitation is detected over the global land area, three continental regions (the western Northern Hemisphere, western Eurasia, and eastern Eurasia), and many smaller IPCC regions, including central North America, East Asia, east-central Asia, eastern Europe, eastern North America, northern Europe, and western Siberia for Rx1day, and central North America, eastern Europe, eastern North America, northern Europe, the Russian Arctic region, and western Siberia for Rx5day. Consistent results are obtained using forcing response estimates from either CanESM2 or CMIP6. Anthropogenic influence is estimated to have substantially decreased the approximate waiting time between extreme annual maximum events in regions where anthropogenic influence has been detected, which has important implications for infrastructure design and climate change adaptation policy.
Program Affiliations
GWF: Global Water Futures
Project Affiliations
GWF-CPE: Climate-Related Precipitation Extremes
GWF-SDEPFC: Short-Duration Extreme Precipitation in Future Climate
Publication Stage
Published
Additional Information
Climate-Precipitation-Extremes, Refereed Publications
Download Links
https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-21-0028.1
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