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      Hydrological Forecasts and Projections for Improved Decision-Making in the Water Sector in Europe

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          Abstract

          Simulations of water fluxes at high spatial resolution that consistently cover historical observations, seasonal forecasts, and future climate projections are key to providing climate services aimed at supporting operational and strategic planning, and developing mitigation and adaptation policies. The End-to-end Demonstrator for improved decision-making in the water sector in Europe (EDgE) is a proof-of-concept project funded by the Copernicus Climate Change Service program that addresses these requirements by combining a multimodel ensemble of state-of-the-art climate model outputs and hydrological models to deliver sectoral climate impact indicators (SCIIs) codesigned with private and public water sector stakeholders from three contrasting European countries. The final product of EDgE is a water-oriented information system implemented through a web application. Here, we present the underlying structure of the EDgE modeling chain, which is composed of four phases: 1) climate data processing, 2) hydrological modeling, 3) stakeholder codesign and SCII estimation, and 4) uncertainty and skill assessments. Daily temperature and precipitation from observational datasets, four climate models for seasonal forecasts, and five climate models under two emission scenarios are consistently downscaled to 5-km spatial resolution to ensure locally relevant simulations based on four hydrological models. The consistency of the hydrological models is guaranteed by using identical input data for land surface parameterizations. The multimodel outputs are composed of 65 years of historical observations, a 19-yr ensemble of seasonal hindcasts, and a century-long ensemble of climate impact projections. These unique, high-resolution hydroclimatic simulations and SCIIs provide an unprecedented information system for decision-making over Europe and can serve as a template for water-related climate services in other regions.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
                American Meteorological Society
                0003-0007
                1520-0477
                December 2019
                December 2019
                : 100
                : 12
                : 2451-2472
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ), Leipzig, Germany
                [2 ]Department of Physical Geography, Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands
                [3 ]Civil and Environmental Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey
                [4 ]University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom
                [5 ]European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, Reading, United Kingdom
                [6 ]Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, NERC, Wallingford, United Kingdom
                [7 ]Environment Agency, Bristol, United Kingdom
                [8 ]Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate, Oslo, Norway
                [9 ]Confederación Hidrográfica del Júcar, Valencia, Spain
                Article
                10.1175/BAMS-D-17-0274.1
                b1e79679-c2a1-42c5-a6df-de7bae7538a3
                © 2019
                History

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