Observed global changes in sector-relevant climate extremes indices—an extension to HadEX3
Loading...
Date
Authors
Dunn, Robert J.H.
Herold, Nicholas
Alexander, Lisa
Donat, Markus G.
Allan, Rob
Bador, Margot
Brunet, Manola
Cheng, Vincent
Ibadullah, Wan Maisarah Wan
Ibrahim, Muhammad Khairul Izzat Bin
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Abstract
Please read abstract in the article.
PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY : To be able to assess changes in extreme temperature and rainfall events across the globe, data sets which capture characteristics of these extreme events are required. The use of indices for these characteristics further enables both data sharing and the comparison of events across the world. Extreme events have impacts across human health, our infrastructure and the natural environment. So far there has not been a global product which presents indices which are relevant for different sectors of our society, including health, agriculture and water resources. In this work we present an extension to an existing data set of extremes indices, HadEX3, by including indices defined by the World Meteorological Organization which were developed with sector specific applications in mind. We have used the same approach and methodology, and where possible the same underlying daily temperature and rainfall observations. The temperature indices show changes consistent with global scale warming, with heat wave characteristics showing increases in the number, duration and intensity of these extreme events in most places. The data files are available for use by interested researchers in their work.
PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY : To be able to assess changes in extreme temperature and rainfall events across the globe, data sets which capture characteristics of these extreme events are required. The use of indices for these characteristics further enables both data sharing and the comparison of events across the world. Extreme events have impacts across human health, our infrastructure and the natural environment. So far there has not been a global product which presents indices which are relevant for different sectors of our society, including health, agriculture and water resources. In this work we present an extension to an existing data set of extremes indices, HadEX3, by including indices defined by the World Meteorological Organization which were developed with sector specific applications in mind. We have used the same approach and methodology, and where possible the same underlying daily temperature and rainfall observations. The temperature indices show changes consistent with global scale warming, with heat wave characteristics showing increases in the number, duration and intensity of these extreme events in most places. The data files are available for use by interested researchers in their work.
Description
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT :
The gridded dataset are available at www.metoffice.gov.uk/hadobs/hadex3 and at www.climdex.org. In addition, a version is available on the CEDA archive (https://dx.doi.org/10.5285/2bfbdba03d9b423f99cadf404ca2daab).
The underlying station indices will be made available on www.climdex.org where we are allowed to do so. For some collections we are not allowed to make the underlying station data public under terms of their licence.
Keywords
Gridded temperature, Precipitation extremes, Extreme temperature, Rainfall, Global change, Climate extremes indices, SDG-13: Climate action
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-13:Climate action
Citation
Dunn, R.J.H., Herold, N., Alexander, L.V. et al. 2024, 'Observed global changes in sector-relevant climate extremes indices—an extension to HadEX3', Earth and Space Science, vol. 11, no. 4, art. e2023EA003279, pp. 1-22, doi : 10.1029/2023EA003279.
