4.7 Article

Risks of seasonal extreme rainfall events in Bangladesh under 1.5 and 2.0 ○C warmer worlds - how anthropogenic aerosols change the story

Journal

HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES
Volume 26, Issue 22, Pages 5737-5756

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/hess-26-5737-2022

Keywords

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This study aims to understand and quantify the relative risks of extreme rainfall events in Bangladesh under the temperature goals of the Paris Agreement, as well as the influence of anthropogenic aerosols on these risks. Results show that both global warming and anthropogenic aerosol concentrations have an impact on rainfall, and the risk of extreme rainfall events has already increased significantly. Reducing anthropogenic aerosols may exacerbate the impacts of climate change.
Anthropogenic climate change is likely to increase the risk (probability of occurrence of a hazard) of extreme weather events in the future. Previous studies have robustly shown how and where climate change has already changed the risks of weather extremes. However, developing countries have been somewhat underrepresented in these studies, despite high vulnerability and limited capacities to adapt. How additional global warming would affect the future risks of extreme rainfall events in Bangladesh needs to be addressed to limit adverse impacts. Our study focuses on understanding and quantifying the relative risks of extreme rainfall events in Bangladesh under the Paris Agreement temperature goals of 1.5 and 2.0 & LCIRC;C warming above pre-industrial levels. In particular, we investigate the influence of anthropogenic aerosols on these risks given their likely future reduction and resulting amplification of global warming. Using large ensemble regional climate model simulations from weather@home under different forcing scenarios, we compare the risks of rainfall events under pre-industrial (natural; NAT), current (actual; ACT), 1.5 and 2.0 & LCIRC;C warmer, and greenhouse gas (GHG)-only (with pre-industrial levels of anthropogenic aerosols) conditions. Both GHGs and anthropogenic aerosols have an impact on seasonal mean rainfall over this region. In general, higher global mean temperature levels lead to higher rainfall and higher aerosol concentrations to lower rainfall, however the relative importance of the two factors varies between the regions. For extreme rainfall events, we find that the risk of a 1 in 100 year rainfall episode has already increased significantly compared with pre- industrial levels across parts of Bangladesh, with additional increases likely for 1.5 and 2.0 & LCIRC;C warming. Climate change impacts on the probabilities of extreme rainfall episodes are found during both pre-monsoon and monsoon seasons. Results show that reduction in anthropogenic aerosols will exacerbate the effects of GHG-induced warming and thereby increasing the rainfall intensity, which has otherwise attenuated the impacts. We highlight that the net aerosol effect varies from region to region within Bangladesh, which leads to different outcomes of aerosol reduction on extreme rainfall statistics and must therefore be considered in future risk assessments. While there is a substantial reduction in risk at 1.5 & LCIRC;C warming when compared to 2 & LCIRC;C warming, the difference is spatially and temporally variable too, specifically with respect to seasonal extreme rainfall events.

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