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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 108, NO. D16,
4519,
doi:10.1029/2002JD002782,
2003
Climate change scenarios from a regional climate model: Estimating change in runoff in southern Africa
N. W. Arnell
Department of Geography, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
D. A. Hudson
Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research, Met Office, Bracknell, UK
R. G. Jones
Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research, Met Office, Bracknell, UK
Abstract
This paper describes an analysis of different ways of constructing climate change scenarios using output from three climate
models. It focuses on using the HadRM3H regional climate model applied across southern Africa and a macroscale runoff model
operating at a scale of 0.5 × 0.5° to simulate river runoff. HadRM3H has a spatial resolution of 0.44 × 0.44° and is driven
by boundary conditions from HadAM3H, a global atmosphere general circulation model with a spatial resolution of 1.875 × 1.25°.
This, in turn, used sea-surface boundary conditions from HadCM3, a coupled global ocean-atmosphere general circulation model
that operates at a spatial resolution of 3.75 × 2.5°. Sixteen climate scenarios were constructed from the three models, representing
different combinations of model scale, whether the climate model simulations were used directly or changes were applied to
an observed baseline, and whether observed or simulated variations from year-to-year were used. The different ways of deriving
climate scenarios from a single initial climate model experiment result in a range in change in average annual runoff at a
location of at least 10%, and often more than 20%. There is a clear difference in the large-scale spatial pattern of change
in runoff from HadCM3 to HadRM3H. Many of the climate features in HadRM3H are already present in HadAM3H simulations, as would
be expected from the experimental design. This suggests that for studies over a large geographic domain, an intermediate-resolution
global climate model can produce useful scenarios for impact assessments. HadRM3H overestimates rainfall across much of southern
Africa and so results in too much runoff: This leads to smaller estimates of future change in runoff than arise when changes
in climate are applied to an observed climate baseline. It is concluded that under these circumstances it is preferable to
apply modeled changes in climate to observed data to construct climate scenarios rather than derive these directly from the
regional climate model simulations. Incorporating increases in interannual variability as simulated by HadRM3H leads to little
change in simulated annual mean runoff. However, it has a larger impact on the frequency distributions of runoff, with extreme
flows predicted to increase more than mean flows and even to increase in areas where the mean flow decreases. This demonstrates
the importance of considering not only changes in mean climate but also climate variability.
Received 23
July
2002;
accepted 24
January
2003;
published 28
August
2003.
Index Terms: 1630 Global Change: Impact phenomena; 1860 Hydrology: Runoff and streamflow; 3337 Meteorology and Atmospheric Dynamics: Numerical modeling and data assimilation; 9305 Information Related to Geographic Region: Africa.
Read Full Article (file size: 9765968 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Arnell, N. W., D. A. Hudson, and R. G. Jones
(2003),
Climate change scenarios from a regional climate model: Estimating change in runoff in southern Africa,
J. Geophys. Res.,
108(D16),
4519,
doi:10.1029/2002JD002782.
Copyright 2003 by the American Geophysical Union.
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