Journal
JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 337-356Publisher
IWA PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.2166/wcc.2021.015
Keywords
climate change; CLMVT; CMIP6; precipitation; temperature
Categories
Funding
- ASEAN-India Project Proposal on 'Climate Change Projection and Assessment of Impacts
- Modelling and Capacity Building Programme' under the ASEAN-India Green Fund [ASCC/CSC/ENV/AWGCC_IISC/ Vol.1/013]
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The latest study predicts significant warming and increased rainfall in mainland SEA countries under climate change. Mitigation and adaptation strategies can potentially slow down warming trends and decrease precipitation after 2050, highlighting the need for appropriate adaptation measures in response to changing climate in the region.
Five mainland SEA countries (Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Vietnam, and Thailand) are threatened by climate change. Here, the latest 18 Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) is employed to examine future climate change in this region under two SSP-RCP (shared socioeconomic pathway-representative concentration pathway) scenarios (SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5). The bias-corrected multi-model ensemble (MME) projects a warming (wetting) over Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Vietnam, and Thailand by 1.88-3.89, 2.04-4.22, 1.88-4.09, 2.03-4.25, and 1.90-3.96 degrees C (8.76-20.47, 12.69-21.10, 9.54-21.10, 13.47-22.12, and 7.03-15.17%) in the 21st century with larger values found under SSP5-8.5 than SSP2-4.5. The MME model displays approximately triple the current rainfall during the boreal summer. Overall, there are robust increases in rainfall during the Southwest Monsoon (3.41-3.44, 8.44-9.53, and 10.89-17.59%) and the Northeast Monsoon (-2.58 to 0.78, -0.43 to 2.81, and 2.32 to 5.45%). The effectiveness of anticipated climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies under SSP2-4.5 results in slowing down the warming trends and decreasing precipitation trends after 2050. All these findings imply that member countries of mainland SEA need to prepare for appropriate adaptation measures in response to the changing climate.
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