4.3 Article

Anthropogenic climate change has changed frequency of past flood during 2010-2013

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s40645-021-00431-w

Keywords

Floods; Event attribution; Large ensemble numerical simulations

Funding

  1. Environment Research and Technology Development Fund of the Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency of Japan [JPMEERF20202005]
  2. JSPS [18H01540]
  3. Integrated Research Program for Advancing Climate Models (TOUGOU) from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), Japan [JPMXD0717935457]
  4. MS&AD InterRisk Research & Consulting, Inc.
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18H01540] Funding Source: KAKEN

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A large ensemble numerical simulation revealed that 64% of floods analyzed during 2010-2013 were affected by anthropogenic climate change, with four flood events in Asia, Europe, and South America being enhanced within the 90% likelihood range. The effects of climate change were more likely to be seen in the snow-induced floods, with three enhanced and four suppressed events in the analysis.
The ongoing increases in anthropogenic radiative forcing have changed the global water cycle and are expected to lead to more intense precipitation extremes and associated floods. However, given the limitations of observations and model simulations, evidence of the impact of anthropogenic climate change on past extreme river discharge is scarce. Here, a large ensemble numerical simulation revealed that 64% (14 of 22 events) of floods analyzed during 2010-2013 were affected by anthropogenic climate change. Four flood events in Asia, Europe, and South America were enhanced within the 90% likelihood range. Of eight snow-induced floods analyzed, three were enhanced and four events were suppressed, indicating that the effects of climate change are more likely to be seen in the snow-induced floods. A global-scale analysis of flood frequency revealed that anthropogenic climate change enhanced the occurrence of floods during 2010-2013 in wide area of northern Eurasia, part of northwestern India, and central Africa, while suppressing the occurrence of floods in part of northeastern Eurasia, southern Africa, central to eastern North America and South America. Since the changes in the occurrence of flooding are the results of several hydrological processes, such as snow melt and changes in seasonal and extreme precipitation, and because a climate change signal is often not detectable from limited observation records, large ensemble discharge simulation provides insights into anthropogenic effects on past fluvial floods.

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