Abstract

Abstract. In 2016, northern France experienced an unprecedented wheat crop loss. The cause of this event is not yet fully understood, and none of the most used crop forecast models were able to predict the event (Ben-Ari et al., 2018). However, this extreme event was likely due to a sequence of particular meteorological conditions, i.e. too few cold days in late autumn–winter and abnormally high precipitation during the spring season. Here we focus on a compound meteorological hazard (warm winter and wet spring) that could lead to a crop loss. This work is motivated by the question of whether the 2016 meteorological conditions were the most extreme possible conditions under current climate, and what the worst-case meteorological scenario would be with respect to warm winters followed by wet springs. To answer these questions, instead of relying on computationally intensive climate model simulations, we use an analogue-based importance sampling algorithm that was recently introduced into this field of research (Yiou and Jézéquel, 2020). This algorithm is a modification of a stochastic weather generator (SWG) that gives more weight to trajectories with more extreme meteorological conditions (here temperature and precipitation). This approach is inspired by importance sampling of complex systems (Ragone et al., 2017). This data-driven technique constructs artificial weather events by combining daily observations in a dynamically realistic manner and in a relatively fast way. This paper explains how an SWG for extreme winter temperature and spring precipitation can be constructed in order to generate large samples of such extremes. We show that with some adjustments both types of weather events can be adequately simulated with SWGs, highlighting the wide applicability of the method. We find that the number of cold days in late autumn 2015 was close to the plausible minimum. However, our simulations of extreme spring precipitation show that considerably wetter springs than what was observed in 2016 are possible. Although the relation of crop loss in 2016 to climate variability is not yet fully understood, these results indicate that similar events with higher impacts could be possible in present-day climate conditions.

Highlights

  • France is one of the highest wheat producers and exporters in the world thanks to yields that are roughly twice as high as the world average (FAO, 2013)

  • If crop yields responds to the number of cold days in winter and to the precipitation rate in spring, as shown in Ben-Ari et al (2018), we have shown here that in the current climate an even worse crop loss event would be possible

  • This paper is a proof of concept for the importance sampling for a simulation of a compound event that would have an impact on crop yield

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Summary

Introduction

France is one of the highest wheat producers and exporters in the world thanks to yields that are roughly twice as high as the world average (FAO, 2013). Given the prominent role of wheat production in France, crop failures can impact the national economy. Classical crop yield forecasting models, based on a combination of expert knowledge and data-driven methods (Müller et al, 2019; MacDonald and Hall, 1980), could not anticipate this unprecedented event because it was outside their training range. To overcome these limitations Ben-Ari et al (2018) developed a logistic model that links the meteorological conditions in the year preceding the harvest with the probability of a crop failure

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