Publication | Open Access
Machine Learning as a Downscaling Approach for Prediction of Wind Characteristics under Future Climate Change Scenarios
54
Citations
54
References
2022
Year
EngineeringMachine LearningWeather ForecastingClimate ModelingWind CharacteristicsEarth ScienceClimate PhysicsNumerical Weather PredictionData ScienceClimate ProjectionMeteorological MeasurementHigh-resolution ModelingAtmospheric ModelingClimate ForecastingClimate ChangeMeteorologyModel Output StatisticsGeographyForecastingClimate DynamicsClimatologyDeveloped Decision TreeClimate ModellingDownscaling ApproachClimate Change Impacts
Assessment of climate change impacts on wind characteristics is crucial for the design, operation, and maintenance of coastal and offshore infrastructures. In the present study, the Model Output Statistics (MOS) method was used to downscale a Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) with General Circulation Model (GCM) results for a case study in the North Atlantic Ocean, and a supervised machine learning method (M5’ Decision Tree model) was developed for the first time to establish a statistical relationship between predicator and predicant. To do so, the GCM simulation results and altimeter remote sensing data were employed to examine the capabilities of the M5’DT model in predicting future wind speed and identifying spatiotemporal trends in wind characteristics. For this purpose, three classes of M5′ models were developed to study the annual, seasonal, and monthly variations of wind characteristics. The developed decision tree (DT) models were employed to statistically downscale the Beijing Normal University Earth System Model (BNU‐ESM) global climate model output. The M 5′ models are calibrated and successfully validated against the GCM simulation results and altimeter remote sensing data. All the proposed models showed firm outputs in the training section. Predictions from the monthly model with a 70/30 training to test ratio demonstrated the best model performance. The monthly prediction model highlighted the decreasing trend in wind speed relative to the control period in 2030 to 2040 for the case study location and across all three future climate change scenarios tested within this study. This reduction in wind speed reduces wind energy by 13% to 19%.
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