Changes in hail and flood risk in high-resolution simulations over Colorado's mountains

Author:  ["Kelly Mahoney","Michael A. Alexander","Gregory Thompson","Joseph J. Barsugli","James D. Scott"]

Publication:  Nature Climate Change

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Tags:     Climate environment

Abstract

The effect of a warming climate on hailstorm frequency and intensity is largely unknown. Global climate models have too coarse resolution to simulate hailstorms explicitly; thus it is unclear if a warmer climate will change hailstorm frequency and intensity, and if so, whether such events will become more likely through intensified thunderstorms or less likely owing to overall warmer conditions. Here we investigate hail generation and maintenance for warm-season extreme precipitation events in Colorado, USA, for both present-day and projected future climates using high-resolution model simulations capable of resolving hailstorms. Most simulations indicate a near-elimination of hail at the surface in future simulations for this region, despite more intense future storms and significantly larger amounts of hail generated in-cloud. An increase in the height of the environmental melting level due to climate warming is found to be the primary reason for the disappearance of surface hail, as the warmer atmosphere increases the melting of frozen precipitation. A decrease in future surface hail at high-elevation locations may imply potential changes in both hail damage and flood risk. Global climate models cannot resolve hailstorms explicitly, so it is unclear whether a warmer climate will change hailstorm frequency and intensity. Now a study using high-resolution model simulations capable of resolving hail indicates the near-elimination of hail at the surface in future simulations for Colorado—a major centre of hailstorms in the United States.

Cite this article

Mahoney, K., Alexander, M., Thompson, G. et al. Changes in hail and flood risk in high-resolution simulations over Colorado's mountains. Nature Clim Change 2, 125–131 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate1344

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