Abstract

Abstract. The recent concerns for world-wide extreme events related to climate change have motivated the development of large scale models that simulate the global water cycle. In this context, analysis of hydrological extremes is important and requires the adaptation of identification methods used for river basin models. This paper presents two methodologies that extend the tools to analyze spatio-temporal drought development and characteristics using large scale gridded time series of hydrometeorological data. The methodologies are classified as non-contiguous and contiguous drought area analyses (i.e. NCDA and CDA). The NCDA presents time series of percentages of areas in drought at the global scale and for pre-defined regions of known hydroclimatology. The CDA is introduced as a complementary method that generates information on the spatial coherence of drought events at the global scale. Spatial drought events are found through CDA by clustering patterns (contiguous areas). In this study the global hydrological model WaterGAP was used to illustrate the methodology development. Global gridded time series of subsurface runoff (resolution 0.5°) simulated with the WaterGAP model from land points were used. The NCDA and CDA were developed to identify drought events in runoff. The percentages of area in drought calculated with both methods show complementary information on the spatial and temporal events for the last decades of the 20th century. The NCDA provides relevant information on the average number of droughts, duration and severity (deficit volume) for pre-defined regions (globe, 2 selected hydroclimatic regions). Additionally, the CDA provides information on the number of spatially linked areas in drought, maximum spatial event and their geographic location on the globe. Some results capture the overall spatio-temporal drought extremes over the last decades of the 20th century. Events like the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) in South America and the pan-European drought in 1976 appeared clearly in both analyses. The methodologies introduced provide an important basis for the global characterization of droughts, model inter-comparison of drought identified from global hydrological models and spatial event analyses.

Highlights

  • Drought is defined as a “sustained and regionally extensive occurrence of below average water availability” (Tallaksen and van Lanen, 2004)

  • The development of the contiguous drought area (CDA) and noncontiguous drought areas (NCDA) methodologies was evaluated for two different time periods

  • The period for the CDA was selected based on the highest number of droughts found in the run of the NCDA analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Drought is defined as a “sustained and regionally extensive occurrence of below average water availability” (Tallaksen and van Lanen, 2004). It is triggered by low or lack of rainfall, often in combination with high evaporation rates. Droughts have large socio-economic and environmental impacts affecting many sectors. Between 1991 and 2005, 950 million people were affected by droughts worldwide and an economic damage of 100 billion US dollars was reported (UN-ISDR, 2009). Data for Europe from 2000–2006 show that each year on average 15 % of the EU total area and 17 % of the EU total population have suffered from the impact of droughts.

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