Projected changes in seasonal and extreme summertime temperature and precipitation in India in response to COVID-19 recovery emissions scenarios
Authors
Prasanna, Felix
Valayannopoulos-Akrivou, Luna-Nefeli
Song, Shaojie
Archibald, Alexander T
McElroy, Michael B
Publication Date
2021-10-29Journal Title
Environmental Research Letters
Publisher
IOP Publishing
Volume
16
Issue
11
Language
en
Type
Other
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
D’Souza, J., Prasanna, F., Valayannopoulos-Akrivou, L., Sherman, P., Penn, E., Song, S., Archibald, A. T., & et al. (2021). Projected changes in seasonal and extreme summertime temperature and precipitation in India in response to COVID-19 recovery emissions scenarios. [Other]. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ac2f1b
Description
Funder: Cambridge STEAM Initiative
Funder: Centre for Environmental Data Analysis, Science and Technology Facilities Council
Funder: Harvard Global Institute; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100016486
Abstract
Abstract: Fossil fuel and aerosol emissions have played important roles on climate over the Indian subcontinent over the last century. As the world transitions toward decarbonization in the next few decades, emissions pathways could have major impacts on India’s climate and people. Pathways for future emissions are highly uncertain, particularly at present as countries recover from COVID-19. This paper explores a multimodel ensemble of Earth system models leveraging potential global emissions pathways following COVID-19 and the consequences for India’s summertime (June–July–August–September) climate in the near- and long-term. We investigate specifically scenarios which envisage a fossil-based recovery, a strong renewable-based recovery and a moderate scenario in between the two. We find that near-term climate changes are dominated by natural climate variability, and thus likely independent of the emissions pathway. By 2050, pathway-induced spatial patterns in the seasonally-aggregated precipitation become clearer with a slight drying in the fossil-based scenario and wetting in the strong renewable scenario. Additionally, extreme temperature and precipitation events in India are expected to increase in magnitude and frequency regardless of the emissions scenario, though the spatial patterns of these changes as well as the extent of the change are pathway dependent. This study provides an important discussion on the impacts of emissions recover pathways following COVID-19 on India, a nation which is likely to be particularly susceptible to climate change over the coming decades.
Keywords
Letter, India, covid, climate change, emissions pathways, extreme events
Sponsorship
NCAS (NE/P016383/1)
National Science Foundation (DGE1745303)
Identifiers
erlac2f1b, ac2f1b, erl-111659.r2
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ac2f1b
This record's DOI: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.77497
Rights
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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