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A non-parametric, statistical downscaling algorithm applied to the Rohini River Basin, Nepal
Authors:Sarah Opitz-Stapleton  Subhrendu Gangopadhyay
Institution:1. Institute for Social and Environmental Transition (ISET), 948 North Street #9, Boulder, CO, 80304, USA
2. U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, Denver Federal Center, 6th & Kipling, Bldg 67, Denver, CO, 80225, USA
Abstract:Climate change scenarios generated by general circulation models have too coarse a spatial resolution to be useful in planning disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation strategies at regional to river basin scales. This study presents a new non-parametric statistical K-nearest neighbor algorithm for downscaling climate change scenarios for the Rohini River Basin in Nepal. The study is an introduction to the methodology and discusses its strengths and limitations within the context of hindcasting basin precipitation for the period of 1976?C2006. The actual downscaled climate change projections are not presented here. In general, we find that this method is quite robust and well suited to the data-poor situations common in developing countries. The method is able to replicate historical rainfall values in most months, except for January, September, and October. As with any downscaling technique, whether numerical or statistical, data limitations significantly constrain model ability. The method was able to confirm that the dataset available for the Rohini Basin does not capture long-term climatology. Yet, we do find that the hindcasts generated with this methodology do have enough skill to warrant pursuit of downscaling climate change scenarios for this particularly poor and vulnerable region of the world.
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