Earth and Space Science (Apr 2024)

Observed Global Changes in Sector‐Relevant Climate Extremes Indices—An Extension to HadEX3

  • Robert J. H. Dunn,
  • Nicholas Herold,
  • Lisa V. Alexander,
  • Markus G. Donat,
  • Rob Allan,
  • Margot Bador,
  • Manola Brunet,
  • Vincent Cheng,
  • Wan Maisarah Wan Ibadullah,
  • Muhammad Khairul Izzat Bin Ibrahim,
  • Andries Kruger,
  • Hisayuki Kubota,
  • Tanya J. R. Lippmann,
  • Jose Marengo,
  • Sifiso Mbatha,
  • Simon McGree,
  • Sandile Ngwenya,
  • Jose Daniel Pabon Caicedo,
  • Andrea Ramos,
  • Jim Salinger,
  • Gerard van derSchrier,
  • Arvind Srivastava,
  • Blair Trewin,
  • Ricardo Vásquez Yáñez,
  • Jorge Vazquez‐Aguirre,
  • Claudia Villaroel Jiménez,
  • Russ Vose,
  • Mohd Noor’Arifin Bin Hj Yussof,
  • Xuebin Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2023EA003279
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Global gridded data sets of observed extremes indices underpin assessments of changes in climate extremes. However, similar efforts to enable the assessment of indices relevant to different sectors of society have been missing. Here we present a data set of sector‐specific indices, based on daily station data, that extends the HadEX3 data set of climate extremes indices. These additional indices, which can be used singly or in combinations, have been recommended by the World Meteorological Organization and are intended to empower decision makers in different sectors with accurate historical information about how sector‐relevant measures of the climate are changing, especially in regions where in situ daily temperature and rainfall data are hard to come by. The annual and/or monthly indices have been interpolated on to a 1.875° × 1.25° longitude‐latitude grid for 1901–2018. We show changes in globally‐averaged time series of these indices in comparison with reanalysis products. Changes in temperature‐based indices are consistent with global scale warming, with days with Tmax > 30°C (TXge30) increasing virtually everywhere with potential impacts on crop fertility. At the other end of the scale, the number of days with Tmin < −2°C (TNltm2) are reducing, decreasing potential damage from frosts. Changes in heat wave characteristics show increases in the number, duration and intensity of these extreme events in most places. The gridded netCDF files and, where possible, the underlying station indices are available from https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/hadobs/hadex3 and https://www.climdex.org.