Abstract

We present results from large ensembles of projected twenty-first century changes in seasonal precipitation and near-surface air temperature for the nation of South Africa. These ensembles are a result of combining Monte Carlo projections from a human-Earth system model of intermediate complexity with pattern-scaled responses from climate models of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5). These future ensemble scenarios consider a range of global actions to abate emissions through the twenty-first century. We evaluate distributions of surface-air temperature and precipitation change over three sub-national regions: western, central, and eastern South Africa. In all regions, we find that without any emissions or climate targets in place, there is a greater than 50% likelihood that mid-century temperatures will increase threefold over the current climate’s two-standard deviation range of variability. However, scenarios that consider more aggressive climate targets all but eliminate the risk of these salient temperature increases. A preponderance of risk toward decreased precipitation (3 to 4 times higher than increased) exists for western and central South Africa. Strong climate targets abate evolving regional hydroclimatic risks. Under a target to limit global climate warming to 1.5 °C by 2100, the risk of precipitation changes within South Africa toward the end of this century (2065–2074) is commensurate to the risk during the 2030s without any global climate target. Thus, these regional hydroclimate risks over South Africa could be delayed by 30 years and, in doing so, provide invaluable lead-time for national efforts to prepare, fortify, and/or adapt.

Highlights

  • Evidence is mounting that Africa’s climate is changing and that these trends will continue through the twenty-first century (e.g., Niang et al 2014)

  • We have presented risk-based results derived from large ensembles of projected changes in seasonal precipitation and near-surface air temperature over South Africa

  • The ensemble procedure combines, via a Taylor expansion, regional patterns of emerging climate responses from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) climate models with the MIT-IGSM, an intermediate complexity earth-system model coupled to a global economic model that evaluates uncertainty in socio-economic growth, anthropogenic emissions, and global environmental response

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Summary

Introduction

Evidence is mounting that Africa’s climate is changing and that these trends will continue through the twenty-first century (e.g., Niang et al 2014). Current efforts to provide more spatially refined climate change information over Africa are ongoing

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Region of study and variables of interest
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Scenarios of global change
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Regional climate‐change pattern kernels
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Temperature
Precipitation
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Mid‐century changes
The evolution of risk and impact of climate targets to abatement
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Summary remarks
Findings
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Full Text
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