Decreasing Rainfall to Year 2100 - Role of the Congo Air Boundary (DRY-CAB)
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Oxford
Department Name: Geography - SoGE
Abstract
Climate change is expected to impose a considerable burden on many regions of the planet including semi-arid areas and where rainfall is vital for subsidence agriculture, hydropower and livelihoods.
There are two large, land-based projected drying trends towards the end of the 21st century, one over the Mediterranean basin and the other over southern Africa. This proposal focuses on southern Africa.
In early summer, the southern edge of the African tropical rain belt moves southwards from the Congo Basin bringing with it deep convective clouds which displace the clear skies and stable atmosphere that dominates the dry southern subtropical African winter. Climate models simulate a future delay in rainfall onset of several weeks and an associated drying in the early summer months of 30% over southern Africa. The drying is expected to occur over south eastern Angola, western Zambia, north east Namibia and much of the South African interior.
There are several problems bound up with the projected southern African drying that require urgent attention so that confidence in the emergence of the change can be matched with timely adaptation measures. First, the atmospheric dynamics take place in a region with extremely sparse observations, particularly in the lower few kilometres of the atmosphere. Secondly, related to the sparse observations, our grasp of the dynamics is very poor compared with other parts of the inhabited tropics and subtropics. Despite being the third largest region of tropical convection, our understanding of the Congo Basin climate system is, at best, rudimentary. How the Congo Basin connects with and potentially controls the climate of the southern subtropics is not known. Meanwhile, climate change is afoot. The frequency of rain-bearing systems is currently in decline and is projected to decline in future decades. Exactly how these systems function at their tropical edge near the Congo Basin southern boundary is unknown. Third, what we do know about the dynamics of early summer drying depends entirely on numerical model simulations. This situation reduces the confidence with which the early summer drying ought to be embraced in adaptation measures given that we have no means of comparing the numerical models with the real world. Fourth, while there has been a step-change in model capability over Africa, e.g. through the 4.5 km convection-permitting model developed as part of the IMPALA project, observations with which to assess the new view of an old circulation problem, are not in place. This delays the adoption of novel, emerging views. At the end of the DRY-CAB project we will have the means to assess whether the tools we use for climate projection have the fidelity to simulate realistically the dynamical elements that control the progression of rainfall southwards in early summer.
This proposal is an urgently needed and vital programme that focuses on the early summer drying dynamics through an ambitious observational campaign and matching suite of model analyses. The research concentrates on the interface between the tropical deep convection at the southern edge of the Congo Basin and the dry, stable air to the south. This juncture is the Congo Air Boundary (CAB). We propose a coordinated and flexible international field programme in order to gain the observations of the CAB urgently needed to confront the numerical models which are the sole source of our current understanding. The overall goal is to bring the matching confidence to the climate science that is required for bold adaptation decision making. The work takes place in one of two places in the world where widespread future drying is projected to occur. We expect that insights gained from the observed dynamics of the evolving edge of the tropical rain belt will be of value in other regions of the tropics.
There are two large, land-based projected drying trends towards the end of the 21st century, one over the Mediterranean basin and the other over southern Africa. This proposal focuses on southern Africa.
In early summer, the southern edge of the African tropical rain belt moves southwards from the Congo Basin bringing with it deep convective clouds which displace the clear skies and stable atmosphere that dominates the dry southern subtropical African winter. Climate models simulate a future delay in rainfall onset of several weeks and an associated drying in the early summer months of 30% over southern Africa. The drying is expected to occur over south eastern Angola, western Zambia, north east Namibia and much of the South African interior.
There are several problems bound up with the projected southern African drying that require urgent attention so that confidence in the emergence of the change can be matched with timely adaptation measures. First, the atmospheric dynamics take place in a region with extremely sparse observations, particularly in the lower few kilometres of the atmosphere. Secondly, related to the sparse observations, our grasp of the dynamics is very poor compared with other parts of the inhabited tropics and subtropics. Despite being the third largest region of tropical convection, our understanding of the Congo Basin climate system is, at best, rudimentary. How the Congo Basin connects with and potentially controls the climate of the southern subtropics is not known. Meanwhile, climate change is afoot. The frequency of rain-bearing systems is currently in decline and is projected to decline in future decades. Exactly how these systems function at their tropical edge near the Congo Basin southern boundary is unknown. Third, what we do know about the dynamics of early summer drying depends entirely on numerical model simulations. This situation reduces the confidence with which the early summer drying ought to be embraced in adaptation measures given that we have no means of comparing the numerical models with the real world. Fourth, while there has been a step-change in model capability over Africa, e.g. through the 4.5 km convection-permitting model developed as part of the IMPALA project, observations with which to assess the new view of an old circulation problem, are not in place. This delays the adoption of novel, emerging views. At the end of the DRY-CAB project we will have the means to assess whether the tools we use for climate projection have the fidelity to simulate realistically the dynamical elements that control the progression of rainfall southwards in early summer.
This proposal is an urgently needed and vital programme that focuses on the early summer drying dynamics through an ambitious observational campaign and matching suite of model analyses. The research concentrates on the interface between the tropical deep convection at the southern edge of the Congo Basin and the dry, stable air to the south. This juncture is the Congo Air Boundary (CAB). We propose a coordinated and flexible international field programme in order to gain the observations of the CAB urgently needed to confront the numerical models which are the sole source of our current understanding. The overall goal is to bring the matching confidence to the climate science that is required for bold adaptation decision making. The work takes place in one of two places in the world where widespread future drying is projected to occur. We expect that insights gained from the observed dynamics of the evolving edge of the tropical rain belt will be of value in other regions of the tropics.
Publications
Attwood K
(2024)
The Southern African Heat Low: Structure, Seasonal and Diurnal Variability, and Climatological Trends
in Journal of Climate
Knight C
(2024)
Remote Midlatitude Control of Rainfall Onset at the Southern African Tropical Edge
in Journal of Climate
Ndarana T
(2024)
A quasi-geostrophic analysis of summertime southern African linear-regime westerly waves
in Climate Dynamics
Zilli M
(2023)
Characteristics of tropical-extratropical cloud bands over tropical and subtropical South America simulated by BAM-1.2 and HadGEM3-GC3.1
in Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society
Zilli M
(2024)
The added value of using convective-permitting regional climate model simulations to represent cloud band events over South America
in Climate Dynamics
| Description | Definitive data set on Congo Air Boundary. Mechanisms for breakdown of Congo Air Boundary |
| Exploitation Route | Weather forecasting, seasonal prediction, climate projections. |
| Sectors | Environment |
| Description | University of Cape Town |
| Organisation | University of Cape Town |
| Country | South Africa |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Joint scoping and delivery of field programme |
| Collaborator Contribution | Joint scoping and delivery of field programme |
| Impact | Joint delivery of observational field campaign |
| Start Year | 2021 |
| Description | Zambian Met Department |
| Organisation | Government of Zambia |
| Department | Zambian Meteorological Department |
| Country | Zambia |
| Sector | Public |
| PI Contribution | Knowledge exchange with ZMD regarding installation and running of Lidar systems and radiosondes. |
| Collaborator Contribution | Expertise freely available from forecasters and senior staff at Zambian Met department for planning and execution of two field campaigns in Zambia. |
| Impact | Forthcoming |
| Start Year | 2021 |
