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DOWNSCALED CLIMATE AND STREAMFLOW STUDY OF THE SOUTHWESTERN UNITED STATES1
Authors:Norman L Miller  Jinwon Kim  Robert K Hartman  John Farrara
Institution:1. Respectively, Scientists, Regional Climate Center, 90–1116, 1 Cyclotron Road, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720;2. Hydrologist, California-Nevada River Forecast Center, 3310 El Camino Ave., Suite 226, Sacramento, California 95821;3. and Scientist, Atmospheric Sciences Department, Mail Stop 156505, UCLA, 405 Hilgard Ave., Los Angeles, California 90095 (E-Mail/Miller: nlmiller@lbl.gov).
Abstract:ABSTRACT: Downscaling coarse resolution climate data to scales that are useful for impact assessment studies is receiving increased attention. Basin-scale hydrologic processes and other local climate impacts related to water resources such as reservoir management, crop and forest productivity, and ecosystem response require climate information at scales that are much finer than current and future GCM resolutions. The Regional Climate System Model (RCSM) is a dynamic downscaling system that has been used since 1994 for short-term precipitation and streamflow predictions and seasonal hindcast analysis with good skill. During the 1997–1998 winter, experimental seasonal forecasts were made in collaboration with the NOAA Climate Prediction Center and UCLA with promising results. Preliminary studies of a control and 2°CO2 perturbation for the southwestern U.S. have been performed.
Keywords:meteorology/climatology  modeling/statistics/surface water hydrology  water management  water resources planning
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