ipo antecedent precipitation presentation

16
Authors: Pui, A., Lall, A., Sharma, A . Acknowledgments: Australian Research Council

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Some thoughts on how the IPO affects flood risk in East Australia...

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Page 1: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

Authors: Pui, A., Lall, A., Sharma, A.

Acknowledgments: Australian Research Council

Page 2: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

Positive Phase 1

Negative Phase

Positive Phase 2

The IPO is a coherent pattern of sea surface temperature (SST) variability over the Pacific Ocean occurring on inter-decadal timescalesPower, S.B., T. Casey, C Folland, A Colman, and V Mehta, 1999: Inter-decadal modulation of the impact of ENSO on Australia. Climate Dynamics, 15, 319-324

Recent studies have shown that Flood Risk is not stationary and is conditioned to the IPO phase

Page 3: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

Kiem, Anthony S. et al., "Multi-decadal variability of flood risk." Geophysical Research Letters, 2003: 1-4.

Negative Phase : Increased Flood Risk

Positive Phase : Decreased Flood Risk

1 in 6 year flood (IPO –ve)

1 in 100 year flood (IPO+ve)

Flood risk is influenced by the IPO.

Is this caused by changes in design rainfall or antecedent conditions?

Page 4: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

1. Do antecedent wetness conditions influence the design flood estimate?

2. Does design rainfall vary between opposing IPO phases?

3. Do antecedent conditions vary between opposing IPO phases?

Page 5: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

Pi

Catchment Antecedent Conditions are approximated by ANTECEDENT PRECIPITATION INDEX (API):

Where :• P = annual maximum 24 hour rainfall amount• i = day on which the annual maximum event occurs• K = API exponential decay factor ( 0.92) • n is the specified time lag (10)

K Pi-1

K2Pi-2

K3 Pi-3

KnPi-n

Cordery I . Antecedent wetness for design flood estimation. Civil Eng Trans I E Aust 1970; 12:181–5

Page 6: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

High P is defined as above 50th percentile annual rainfall maxima

Page 7: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

>

<

High rainfall corresponding to high flows is most likely when catchment in a wetter state

Page 8: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

Test Statistic:

H0 : No. Stations Iratio > 1 <= No. Stations Iratio < 1

HA : No. Stations Iratio > 1 > No. Stations Iratio < 1

Page 9: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

Proportion: Australia wide Iratio > 1 = 0.64

East Australia Iratio > 1 = 0.61

Not significant as per field significance test (0.95%)

Iratio > 1

Iratio < 1

Page 10: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

Test Statistic:

H0 : No. Stations APIratio > 1 <= No. Stations APIratio < 1

HA : No. Stations APIratio > 1 > No. Stations APIratio < 1

Page 11: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

APIratio > 1

APIratio < 1

Proportion: Australia wide APIratio > 1 = 0.78

East Australia APIratio > 1 = 0.86

Significant as per field significance test (0.95%)

Page 12: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

We have shown:

1. antecedent wetness conditions influence the design flood estimate

2. Variation in design rainfall between opposing IPO phases is not statistically significant

3. However, antecedent conditions vary significantly between opposing IPO phases?

What does this mean for current approaches to Design Flood Estimation?

Page 13: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

Years

Years

Rain

fall

AEP(%)

Duration

Inte

nsity

Stre

am F

low

Stre

am F

low

Rain

fall

Years

Stre

am F

low

Annual Maximum P IFD Relationship Flood Frequency Curve

Continuous P Annual Maximum Q Flood Frequency Curve

AEP(%)

Page 14: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

Stre

am F

low

Flood Frequency Curve

AEP(%)

Rain

fall

HyetographRa

infa

llRa

infa

ll

Stre

am F

low

Stre

am F

low

AEP(%)

AEP(%)

Page 15: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

• Future approaches for flood estimation need to account for the non-stationary character of antecedent moisture.

• This seriously compromises the assumption that design rainfall leads to design floods (‘AEP neutrality’).

• Also beware of rainfall-runoff models calibrated to data from a single IPO state.

Page 16: IPO Antecedent Precipitation Presentation

Alexander Pui

School of Civil & Environmental Engineering, UNSW

Email: [email protected]