Abstract

ABSTRACT[Translated by the editorial staff] An analysis of climate trends and return levels for the period 1960–2008, using the ETCCDI-CLIVAR/JCOMM project approach, has been conducted for Chad, where droughts and flooding are recurrent. Using the RClimDex software, we show that almost all rainfall trends are decreasing, as in Central and Northern Africa. Rare extreme rain events (R99p) decrease significantly: 0.85 mm per decade. However, we note a slightly upward trend of 0.5 day per decade, in the number of consecutive dry days (CDD). Temperature indices are all positive except for the frequencies of very hot days (TX90p) and very cold nights (TN10p), which decrease significantly: −0.39% day per year per decade, as in Central Africa and globally. Sequences of hot or cold days decrease as well, but by about 1% per year per decade. Return periods identified with the generalized extreme value (GEV) distributions show that they are well defined from 1 to 10 years. Extremely rare events from 10 to 50 years are associated with a mean return level of 660 mm of annual precipitation.

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