Atmospheric Science Letters (Feb 2022)

On the need of bias adjustment for more plausible climate change projections of extreme heat

  • Maialen Iturbide,
  • Ana Casanueva,
  • Joaquín Bedia,
  • Sixto Herrera,
  • Josipa Milovac,
  • José Manuel Gutiérrez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/asl.1072
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 2
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract The assessment of climate change impacts in regions with complex orography and land‐sea interfaces poses a challenge related to shortcomings of global climate models. Furthermore, climate indices based on absolute thresholds are especially sensitive to systematic model biases. Here we assess the effect of bias adjustment (BA) on the projected changes in temperature extremes focusing on the number of annual days with maximum temperature above 35°C. To this aim, we use three BA methods of increasing complexity (from simple scaling to empirical quantile mapping) and present a global analysis of raw and BA CMIP5 projections under different global warming levels. The main conclusions are (1) BA amplifies the magnitude of the climate change signal (in some regions by a factor 2 or more) achieving a more plausible representation of future heat threshold‐based indices; (2) simple BA methods provide similar results to more complex ones, thus supporting the use of simple and parsimonious BA methods in these studies.

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