Modeling non-stationary 1-hour extreme rainfall for Indian river basins under changing climate

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Date

2025

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Elsevier B.V.

Abstract

India's complex topography and the increasing influence of climate change have exacerbated the challenges of modeling 1-hour non-stationary extreme rainfall events. Prior studies have indicated rising intensities of such events, particularly in coastal and urban areas. This study addresses these issues by developing 155 basin-specific non-stationary surface response models, incorporating geographical, climatic, and temporal covariates. Using 13 Max-Stable Process (MSP) characterizations, extreme rainfall variability across 11 major river basins and three-time scales were effectively modeled. The Brown-Resnick, Geometric-Gaussian, and Extremal-t models demonstrated varying effectiveness across regions. The findings emphasize the critical role of region-specific analysis in water resource management and disaster preparedness, where the high temporal resolution datasets are limited for the point process-based models. The global processes and regional climate change are found to predominantly influence 1-hour extreme rainfall across the majority of river basins in India. © 2025 Elsevier B.V.

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Keywords

Changing climate, Complex topographies, Extreme rainfall, Geography, Global process, Indian rivers, Max-stable process, Nonstationary, Rainfall event, River basins, climate change, disaster management, extreme event, global perspective, hydrological modeling, precipitation intensity, regional climate, resource management, river basin, topography, water resource, India

Citation

Journal of Hydrology, 2025, 652, , pp. -

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