Heatwave future changes from an ensemble of km-scale regional climate
simulations within CORDEX-FPS convection
Abstract
As global temperatures continue to rise, the impact of heatwaves (HWs)
becomes increasingly striking. The increasing frequency and intensity of
these events underscore the critical need to understand regional-scale
mechanisms and feedback, exacerbating or mitigating HW magnitude.
Here, we use an ensemble of convection-permitting regional climate
models (CPRCMs) to elucidate future HW changes at these fine spatial
scales. We explore whether the recently highlighted drier/warmer signal
introduced by CPRCMs improves summer temperature extremes representation
and if it modulates future HW changes compared to
convection-parameterizing regional climate models (RCMs).
In historical runs, CPRCMs show a more realistic representation of
summer maximum temperature according to a ground-station-based
evaluation.
CPRCMs project substantially drier conditions than RCMs. This is
associated with a modulation of HW temperature changes which show
diversified spatial patterns, magnitudes, and signs.
CPRCMs ensemble shows an overall reduction in HW metrics future changes
inter-model spread compared to the RCMs ensemble.