Publication | Open Access
Global Increasing Trends in Annual Maximum Daily Precipitation
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Citations
43
References
2012
Year
Precipitation ExtremesFuture Climatic ChangeEngineeringExtreme PrecipitationExtreme WeatherWeather ForecastingClimate ModelingPrecipitationEarth ScienceGlobal DatasetApplied MeteorologyHydroclimate ModelingGlobal Increasing TrendsClimate ChangeClimate VariabilityHydrometeorologyMeteorologyClimate SciencesGeographyClimate DynamicsClimatologyGlobal ClimateFlood Risk Management
The study examines trends in annual maximum daily precipitation across 8,326 global stations from 1900–2009. The authors applied Mann–Kendall trend tests and nonstationary generalized extreme value analysis to assess nonstationarity and link precipitation extremes to global mean temperature. They found significant global increases in extreme precipitation, with about two‑thirds of stations rising, and a 5.9–7.7 % K⁻¹ temperature dependence that is strongest in the tropics and high latitudes, though equatorial estimates are uncertain.
Abstract This study investigates the presence of trends in annual maximum daily precipitation time series obtained from a global dataset of 8326 high-quality land-based observing stations with more than 30 years of record over the period from 1900 to 2009. Two complementary statistical techniques were adopted to evaluate the possible nonstationary behavior of these precipitation data. The first was a Mann–Kendall nonparametric trend test, and it was used to evaluate the existence of monotonic trends. The second was a nonstationary generalized extreme value analysis, and it was used to determine the strength of association between the precipitation extremes and globally averaged near-surface temperature. The outcomes are that statistically significant increasing trends can be detected at the global scale, with close to two-thirds of stations showing increases. Furthermore, there is a statistically significant association with globally averaged near-surface temperature, with the median intensity of extreme precipitation changing in proportion with changes in global mean temperature at a rate of between 5.9% and 7.7% K−1, depending on the method of analysis. This ratio was robust irrespective of record length or time period considered and was not strongly biased by the uneven global coverage of precipitation data. Finally, there is a distinct meridional variation, with the greatest sensitivity occurring in the tropics and higher latitudes and the minima around 13°S and 11°N. The greatest uncertainty was near the equator because of the limited number of sufficiently long precipitation records, and there remains an urgent need to improve data collection in this region to better constrain future changes in tropical precipitation.
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