Three generations of NARCliM: future projections of mean and extreme climate over the CORDEX Australasia domain

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Abstract

Regional climate simulations provide essential high-resolution information for climate services. This study evaluates future changes in mean climate and 10 extremes using three generations of the NARCliM (NSW and Australian Regional Climate Modelling) project, which downscale CMIP3, CMIP5, and CMIP6 models.Projections show statistically significant increases in maximum and minimum temperatures across all NARCliM generations, with consistent spatial patterns. The magnitude of warming is primarily influenced by driving GCMs and emissions scenarios. In contrast, precipitation projections exhibit greater variability between generations, reflecting model and scenario differences and underscoring the challenge of projecting future rainfall.Extreme heat indices are projected to increase across Australia, with consistent spatial patterns and stronger changes under higher emissions, indicating more frequent and severe extreme heat events. Precipitation extremes display more variability across regions, model generations, and scenarios, although certain trends are robust. The intensity of very extreme rainfall (above the 99th percentile) is projected to increase, as is the maximum length of dry spells. Conversely, the maximum length of wet spells and the number of heavy rain days are expected to decrease. NARCliM2.0 specifically suggests shorter wet periods and fewer heavy rain days, but more intense extreme rainfall.These findings demonstrate the relative robustness of temperature extremes compared to precipitation and emphasize the value of broader GCM ensembles in future downscaling efforts to improve confidence in regional projections.

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