A case study of possible future summer convective precipitation over the UK and Europe from a regional climate projection

Alan M. Gadian, Alan M. Blyth, Cindy L. Bruyere, Ralph R. Burton, James M. Done, James Groves, Greg Holland, Stephen D. Mobbs, Jutta Thielen del Pozo, Mari R. Tye, James L. Warner

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Scopus citations

Abstract

Climate change caused by green house gas emissions is now following the trend of rapid warming consistent with a RCP8.5 forcing. Climate models are still unable to represent the mesoscale convective processes that occur at resolutions ∼O(3 km) and are not capable of resolving precipitation patterns in time and space with sufficient accuracy to represent convection. In this article, the UK Met Office precipitation observations are compared with the simulations for the period 1990–1995 followed by a simulation of a near-future period 2031–2036 for a regional nested weather model. The convection-permitting model, resolution ∼O(3 km), provides a good correspondence to the observational precipitation data and demonstrates the importance of explicit convection for future summer precipitation estimates. The UK summer precipitation is reduced slightly (∼10%) for 2031–2036 and there is no evidence of an increase in the peak maximum hourly precipitation magnitude. A similar pattern is observed over the whole European inner model domain. The results using the Kain–Fritsch convective parameterization scheme at a resolution ∼O(12 km) in the outer domain increase summer precipitation by ∼10% for the UK. The average precipitation rate per event increases, dry periods extend and wet periods shorten. As part of the change, 10-m winds of <3 m s−1 become more common – a scenario that would impact on power generation from wind turbines through calmer conditions and cause more frequent pollution episodes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2314-2324
Number of pages11
JournalInternational Journal of Climatology
Volume38
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2018

Keywords

  • Convection
  • Precipitation
  • Regional Climate

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