Multidecadal oscillations in rainfall extremes

Many have anticipated a worldwide increase in the frequency and intensity of rainfall extremes and floods since the last decade(s). The relative importance of the two main contributing factors, climate change by global warming and natural variability by climate oscillations, is an issue of debate si...

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Main Authors: Willems, Patrick, Yiou, Pascal
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/267518
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spelling ftunivleuven:oai:lirias.kuleuven.be:123456789/267518 2023-05-15T17:35:40+02:00 Multidecadal oscillations in rainfall extremes Willems, Patrick Yiou, Pascal 2010-05 https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/267518 en eng Copernicus Publications Göttingen, Germany Geophysical Research Abstracts vol:12 EGU General Assembly 2010 location:Vienna, Austria date:2 - 7 May 2010 https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/267518 1029-7006 Climate change Precipitation Description (Metadata) only IMa conference_paper 2010 ftunivleuven 2016-01-24T21:05:53Z Many have anticipated a worldwide increase in the frequency and intensity of rainfall extremes and floods since the last decade(s). The relative importance of the two main contributing factors, climate change by global warming and natural variability by climate oscillations, is an issue of debate since many years. Based on a novel technique for the identification and analysis of changes in extremes, this paper affirms that rainfall extremes and other climate related variables in northwestern Europe have oscillatory behaviour at multidecadal time scales. Moreover, it is shown that the recent upward trend in these extremes is partly related to a positive phase of this oscillation, which coincided with the climate change influence. The analysis is based on a worldwide unique dataset of 108 years of 10 minutes rainfall intensities at Uccle (Brussels), not affected by instrumental changes or measurement inhomogeneity. We also checked the consistency of the findings with long records in neighbouring regions of northwestern Europe. The past 100 years showed larger and more rainfall extremes for the 1910s-1920s, the 1960s, and more recently during both winter and summer of the past 15 years. These oscillation peaks are in part explained by persistence in atmospheric circulation patterns over the North Atlantic during periods of 10 to 15 years. During winter, the most recent oscillation peak was more enhanced suggesting that there was a global warming effect on the increase in rainfall extremes, and thus of river floods in this season. For the summer season, the oscillation peak and related cluster in rainfall extremes appears to be the main meteorological factor that explains the large number of recent urban drainage system floods in the region. status: published Conference Object North Atlantic KU Leuven: Lirias
institution Open Polar
collection KU Leuven: Lirias
op_collection_id ftunivleuven
language English
topic Climate change
Precipitation
spellingShingle Climate change
Precipitation
Willems, Patrick
Yiou, Pascal
Multidecadal oscillations in rainfall extremes
topic_facet Climate change
Precipitation
description Many have anticipated a worldwide increase in the frequency and intensity of rainfall extremes and floods since the last decade(s). The relative importance of the two main contributing factors, climate change by global warming and natural variability by climate oscillations, is an issue of debate since many years. Based on a novel technique for the identification and analysis of changes in extremes, this paper affirms that rainfall extremes and other climate related variables in northwestern Europe have oscillatory behaviour at multidecadal time scales. Moreover, it is shown that the recent upward trend in these extremes is partly related to a positive phase of this oscillation, which coincided with the climate change influence. The analysis is based on a worldwide unique dataset of 108 years of 10 minutes rainfall intensities at Uccle (Brussels), not affected by instrumental changes or measurement inhomogeneity. We also checked the consistency of the findings with long records in neighbouring regions of northwestern Europe. The past 100 years showed larger and more rainfall extremes for the 1910s-1920s, the 1960s, and more recently during both winter and summer of the past 15 years. These oscillation peaks are in part explained by persistence in atmospheric circulation patterns over the North Atlantic during periods of 10 to 15 years. During winter, the most recent oscillation peak was more enhanced suggesting that there was a global warming effect on the increase in rainfall extremes, and thus of river floods in this season. For the summer season, the oscillation peak and related cluster in rainfall extremes appears to be the main meteorological factor that explains the large number of recent urban drainage system floods in the region. status: published
format Conference Object
author Willems, Patrick
Yiou, Pascal
author_facet Willems, Patrick
Yiou, Pascal
author_sort Willems, Patrick
title Multidecadal oscillations in rainfall extremes
title_short Multidecadal oscillations in rainfall extremes
title_full Multidecadal oscillations in rainfall extremes
title_fullStr Multidecadal oscillations in rainfall extremes
title_full_unstemmed Multidecadal oscillations in rainfall extremes
title_sort multidecadal oscillations in rainfall extremes
publisher Copernicus Publications
publishDate 2010
url https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/267518
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation Geophysical Research Abstracts vol:12
EGU General Assembly 2010 location:Vienna, Austria date:2 - 7 May 2010
https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/267518
1029-7006
_version_ 1766134900269776896