Abstract

<p>Heavy precipitation events (HPEs) in the densely populated eastern Mediterranean trigger natural hazards, such as flash floods and urban flooding. However, they also supply critical amounts of fresh water to this desert-bounded region. The impact of global warming on such events is thus vital to the inhabitants of the region. HPEs are poorly represented in global climate models, leading to large uncertainty in their sensitivity to climate change. Is total rainfall in HPEs decreasing, as projected for the mean annual rainfall? Are short duration rain rates decreasing, or rather increasing as expected from the higher atmospheric moisture content? Where are the changes more pronounced, near the sea or farther inland towards the desert? To answer these questions, we have identified 41 historical HPEs from a long weather radar record (1990-2014) and simulated them in the same resolution (1 km<sup>2</sup>) using the convection-permitting weather research and forecasting (WRF) model. Results were validated versus the radar data, and served as a control group to simulations of the same events under ‘pseudo global warming’ (PGW) conditions. The PGW methodology we use imposes results from the ensemble mean of 29 Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) models for the end of the century on the initial and boundary conditions of each event simulated. The results indicate that HPEs in the future may become more temporally focused: they are 6% shorter and exhibit maximum local short-duration rain rates which are ~20% higher on average, with larger values over the sea and the wetter part of the region, and smaller over the desert. However, they are also much drier; total precipitation during the future-simulated HPEs decreases substantially (~-20%) throughout the eastern Mediterranean. The meteorological factors leading to this decrease include shallower cyclones and the projected differential land-sea warming, which causes reduced relative humidity over land. These changing rainfall patterns are expected to amplify water scarcity – a known nexus of conflict and strife in the region – highlighting the urgent need for deeper knowledge, and the implementation of adaptation and mitigation strategies.</p>

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