Abstract

We assessed the ability of Regional Climate Models (RCMs) to reproduce observed means, inter-annual variance and trends for rainfall indices that were important for runoff generation over southeast Australia. To establish the benefit of the RCM without being penalized or rewarded by the performance of the forcing GCM, we used ECMWF Re-Analysis-interim (ERA-Interim) to force the Weather Research and Forecasting model (WRF) and the Conformal Cubic Atmospheric Model (CCAM). The performance of two different configurations of each RCM was evaluated against an observational dataset (Australian Gridded Climate Data, AGCD) and compared with that of ERA-Interim. The assessments were carried out at both observational and ERA-Interim grid resolutions: ∼5 km and ∼80 km, respectively. As hypothesised, the RCMs outperformed ERA-Interim in representing spatial patterns and magnitude of mean rainfall, because of higher spatial resolution. RCMs also accurately represented the general spatial patterns of variance, but systematically underestimated the inter-annual variability over much of the domain. RCMs performed better than ERA-Interim in reproducing the magnitude of trends in some cases, especially in the decline of cool season rainfall in southeast Australia, which has had significant impacts on water resources. One of the two CCAM runs generally performed best across all rainfall indices, in part because of atmospheric spectral nudging and an improved land-surface model. Based on the findings, we have provided suggestions on where new research on the development of RCMs could be focused and recommendations relevant to the next generation of Australian hydro-climate projections generated from the sixth phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6).

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