4.6 Article

Understanding the diversity of the West African monsoon system change projected by CORDEX-CORE regional climate models

Journal

CLIMATE DYNAMICS
Volume 61, Issue 5-6, Pages 2395-2419

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00382-023-06690-1

Keywords

Global warming; Monsoon system; Rainfall changes; West Africa; RCPs; CORDEX-CORE

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Understanding real uncertainties in projections is essential for decision and policy makers. This study investigates the response of the West African Monsoon system to different emission scenarios using regional climate models. The analysis reveals diverse rainfall change patterns under global warming, and identifies surface pressure changes and jet streams as key factors influencing rainfall distribution. The study suggests that the Delta Pr patterns from one model (REMO2015) are more plausible than another (RegCM4-v7), and highlights the importance of mitigating warming as recommended by the Paris agreement.
Understanding real uncertainties in projections is needed to support actions of decision and policy makers. In this study, two state-of-the-art regional climate models with similar to 25 km horizontal resolution forced with three different global climate models are employed to investigate the response of the West African Monsoon (WAM) system under the low (RCP2.6) and high (RCP8.5) emission scenarios. We make a step towards assessing the plausibility of rainfall change (Delta Pr) patterns based on the models' ability to realistically represent the WAM system under the historical period, and by analyzing changes in mechanisms associated with Delta Pr patterns. Under global warming, experiments exhibit diverse Delta Pr patterns underpinned by different combinations of mechanisms operating simultaneously. A dipole-like surface pressure change between the Sahara Desert and the Guinea Coast appears to be a differentiating factor between experiments featuring homogeneous or increased rainfall over all or a part of the Sahel from those simulating heterogeneous or reduced rainfall over the same domain. This dipole acts by modulating the amount and the extent of deepening of the monsoon flux inland, and hence the latitudinal positioning of the monsoon convective system. This process contributes to moistening the whole or central and eastern Sahel in some experiments while drying the Guinea Coast. The West African Westerly Jet (WAWJ) is responsible for strengthening and moistening the western Sahel under RCP2.6. However, the WAMJ becomes much stronger under RCP8.5 and may have contributed to the drying of the western Sahel by shifting moisture eastwards in addition to the mid-tropospheric moisture divergence through enhanced African Easterly Jet. Furthermore, for experiments expecting wetting (drying) of the Sahel, the strengthening (weakening) of the tropical easterly jet may have contributed to the projected intensification (reduction) of WAM rainfall by favoring uplift (downlift) above 600 hPa. It also emerges that the Delta Pr patterns from REMO2015 experiments are likely more plausible than those from RegCM4-v7. The impacts of strong warming on the regional hydrological cycle are further investigated and we found that changes gradually intensify with the level of radiative forcing, highlighting the importance of mitigating warming as recommended by the Paris agreement.

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