Abstract

In Malaysia, extreme rainfall events are often linked to a number of environmental disasters such as landslides, monsoonal and flash floods. In response to the negative impacts of such disaster, studies assessing the changes and projections of extreme rainfall are vital in order to gather climate change information for better management of hydrological processes. This study investigates the changes and projections of extreme rainfall over Peninsular Malaysia for the period 2081-2100 based on the RCP 6.0 scenario. In particular, this study adopted the statistical downscaling method which enables high resolution, such as hourly data, to be used for the input. Short duration and high intensity convective rainfall is a normal feature of tropical rainfall especially in the western part of the peninsular. The proposed method, the Advanced Weather Generator model is constructed based on thirty years of hourly rainfall data from forty stations. To account for uncertainties, an ensemble multi-model of five General Circulation Model realizations is chosen to generate projections of extreme rainfall for the period 2081-2100. Results of the study indicate a possible increase in future extreme events for both the hourly and 24 h extreme rainfall with the latter showing a wider spatial distribution of increase.

Highlights

  • Extreme precipitation events can be defined as maximum values of precipitation or exceedance above pre-existing high threshold (Stephenson, 2008)

  • This study proposes the use of statistical downscaling method for future projections of extreme rainfall at hourly scale within Peninsular Malaysia

  • This paper investigates the trends of future projections of extreme rainfall at hourly scale with the use of Advance Weather Generator (AWEGEN) model in Peninsular Malaysia

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Summary

Introduction

Extreme precipitation events can be defined as maximum values of precipitation or exceedance above pre-existing high threshold (Stephenson, 2008). A study on historical data between the years 1975 and 2010 by Syafrina et al (2015) shows increasing trends of extreme rainfall in Peninsular Malaysia. Both studies applied dynamical downscaling and used daily historical rainfall data to make projection on extreme and average rainfall for Malaysia.

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