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Convection permitting regional climate change simulations for understanding future climate and informing decision making in Africa

Senior, Catherine A., Marsham, John H., Berthou, Segolene, Burgin, Laura E., Folwell, Sonja S., Kendon, Elizabeth J., Klein, Cornelia M., Jones, Richard G., Mittal, Neha, Powell, David P., Tomassini, Lorenzo, Vischel, Theo, Becker, Bernd, Birch, Cathryn E., Crook, Julia, Dougill, Andrew J., Finney, Declan L., Graham, Richard J., Hart, Neil C. G., Jack, Christopher D., Jackson, Lawrence S., James, Rachel, Koelle, Bettina, Misiani, Herbert, Mwalukanga, Brenda, Parker, Douglas J., Stratton, Rachel A., Taylor, Christopher M., Tucker, Simon O., Wainwright, Caroline M. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7311-7846, Washington, Richard and Willet, Martin R. 2021. Convection permitting regional climate change simulations for understanding future climate and informing decision making in Africa. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 102 (6) , E1206–E1223. 10.1175/bams-d-20-0020.1

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Abstract

Pan-Africa convection-permitting regional climate model simulations have been performed to study the impact of high resolution and the explicit representation of atmospheric moist convection on the present and future climate of Africa. These unique simulations have allowed European and African climate scientists to understand the critical role that the representation of convection plays in the ability of a contemporary climate model to capture climate and climate change, including many impact-relevant aspects such as rainfall variability and extremes. There are significant improvements in not only the small-scale characteristics of rainfall such as its intensity and diurnal cycle, but also in the large-scale circulation. Similarly, effects of explicit convection affect not only projected changes in rainfall extremes, dry spells, and high winds, but also continental-scale circulation and regional rainfall accumulations. The physics underlying such differences are in many cases expected to be relevant to all models that use parameterized convection. In some cases physical understanding of small-scale change means that we can provide regional decision-makers with new scales of information across a range of sectors. We demonstrate the potential value of these simulations both as scientific tools to increase climate process understanding and, when used with other models, for direct user applications. We describe how these ground-breaking simulations have been achieved under the U.K. Government’s Future Climate for Africa Programme. We anticipate a growing number of such simulations, which we advocate should become a routine component of climate projection, and encourage international coordination of such computationally and human-resource expensive simulations as effectively as possible.

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Publication
Status: Published
Schools: Earth and Environmental Sciences
Publisher: American Meteorological Society
ISSN: 0003-0007
Date of Acceptance: 5 February 2021
Last Modified: 24 Jan 2023 11:45
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/155498

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