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Detection of continental-scale intensification of hourly rainfall extremes

Abstract

Temperature scaling studies suggest that hourly rainfall magnitudes might increase beyond thermodynamic expectations with global warming1,2,3; that is, above the Clausius–Clapeyron (CC) rate of ~6.5% °C−1. However, there is limited evidence of such increases in long-term observations. Here, we calculate continental-average changes in the magnitude and frequency of extreme hourly and daily rainfall observations from Australia over the years 1990–2013 and 1966–1989. Observed changes are compared with the uncertainty from natural variability and expected changes from CC scaling as a result of global mean surface temperature change. We show that increases in daily rainfall extremes are consistent with CC scaling, but are within the range of natural variability. In contrast, changes in the magnitude of hourly rainfall extremes are close to or exceed double the expected CC scaling, and are above the range of natural variability, exceeding CC × 3 in the tropical region (north of 23° S). These continental-scale changes in extreme rainfall are not explained by changes in the El Niño–Southern Oscillation or changes in the seasonality of extremes. Our results indicate that CC scaling on temperature provides a severe underestimate of observed changes in hourly rainfall extremes in Australia, with implications for assessing the impacts of extreme rainfall.

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Fig. 1: Changes in the magnitude of daily and hourly rainfall for different definitions of extreme rainfall.
Fig. 2: Changes in the magnitude of extreme daily and hourly rainfall.
Fig. 3: Changes in the magnitude of northern and southern Australian daily and hourly rainfall for different definitions of extreme rainfall.
Fig. 4: Effect of the phase of ENSO on the occurrence of extremes.

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Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the INTENSE project. INTENSE is supported by the European Research Council (grant ERC-2013-CoG-617329). H.F. is funded by the Wolfson Foundation and Royal Society as a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award holder (grant WM140025). S.W. is supported by Australian Research Council Discovery project DP150100411.

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S.B.G. carried out the analysis. S.B.G., H.J.F. and R.B. contributed to the design of the methodology. All authors discussed the results and contributed to writing the paper.

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Correspondence to Selma B. Guerreiro.

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Supplementary Information

Supplementary Figures 1–15, Supplementary Tables 1 & 2, Supplementary References

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Guerreiro, S.B., Fowler, H.J., Barbero, R. et al. Detection of continental-scale intensification of hourly rainfall extremes. Nature Clim Change 8, 803–807 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-018-0245-3

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