Shifting Patterns in the Weather Regimes that Drive Regional Drought:
Demonstration for South Africa
Abstract
Traditionally, vulnerability assessments for climate change risks rely
on randomized precipitation possibilities and lack a physical science
basis. Additionally, limitations in representing local precipitation
fields in General Circulation Models (GCM) hinder the usefulness of
precipitation projections of future hydroclimatic extremes. To address
these challenges in climate risk management, this study investigates the
ability of large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns, or weather
regimes (WRs), to explain local precipitation and regional precipitation
drivers. Utilizing a Non-Homogeneous Hidden Markov Chain approach, we
identified six primary WRs for South Africa, each exhibiting distinct
seasonality. Three WRs, associated with higher precipitation near Cape
Town, dominate in winter, while two WRs linked to lower precipitation
are prevalent in summer. The WR-precipitation relationship in South
Africa appears to be influenced by topographic features (e.g., The Great
Escarpment and Cape Fold Mountains) and ocean currents (Agulhas and
Benguela), leading to distinct spatial precipitation responses to
regional WR configurations. The seasonal frequency of WRs in the South
African region has shifted dramatically in the past 20 years. Changes in
WR composition, particularly the replacement since 2010 of a WR
associated with rain in Cape Town with a dry WR, may help to explain the
worsening drought conditions in the past decade. During the 2015-2017
Day Zero drought in Cape Town, the regional WR associated with dryness
in Cape Town occurred more frequently than the historical average. The
insights from the WR-precipitation analysis can be used to inform
WR-based stochastic weather generators for vulnerability assessment and
climate change adaptation planning.