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Climate Change Increases the Probability of Heavy Rains Like Those of Storm Desmond in the UK—An Event Attribution Study in Near-Real Time

Summary/Abstract

On 4–6 December 2015, the storm “Desmond” caused very heavy rainfall in northern England and Scotland, which led to widespread flooding. Here we provide an initial assessment of the influence of anthropogenic climate change on the likelihood of one-day precipitation events averaged over an area encompassing northern England and southern Scotland using data and methods available immediately after the event occurred. The analysis is based on three independent methods of extreme event attribution: historical observed trends, coupled climate model simulations and a large ensemble of regional model simulations. All three methods agree that the effect of climate change is positive, making precipitation events like this about 40 % more likely, with a provisional 2.5–97.5 % confidence interval of 5–80 %.

Geert Jan van Oldenborgh et al., Climate Change Increases the Probability of Heavy Rains Like Those of Storm Desmond in the UK—An Event Attribution Study in Near-Real Time, 12 HYDRO. EARTH SYST. SCI. DISCUSSIONS 13197 (2015).

Link to Full Study
December 2015
G. J. van Oldenborgh, F. E. L. Otto, K. Haustein, H. Cullen
Hydrology and Earth Systems Sciences
Peer-reviewed Study
Europe
Extreme Event Attribution → Extreme Rainfall

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