Multi-criteria performance evaluation of gridded precipitation and temperature products in data-sparse regions

Lawal, I.M. and Bertram, D. and White, C.J. and Jagaba, A.H. and Hassan, I. and Shuaibu, A. (2021) Multi-criteria performance evaluation of gridded precipitation and temperature products in data-sparse regions. Atmosphere, 12 (12).

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Abstract

Inadequate climate data stations often make hydrological modelling a rather challenging task in data-sparse regions. Gridded climate data can be used as an alternative; however, their accuracy in replicating the climatology of the region of interest with low levels of uncertainty is important to water resource planning. This study utilised several performance metrics and multi-criteria decision making to assess the performance of the widely used gridded precipitation and temperature data against quality-controlled observed station records in the Lake Chad basin. The study�s findings reveal that the products differ in their quality across the selected performance metrics, although they are especially promising with regards to temperature. However, there are some inherent weaknesses in replicating the observed station data. Princeton University Global Meteorological Forcing precipitation showed the worst performance, with Kling�Gupta efficiency of 0.13�0.50, a mean modified index of agreement of 0.68, and a similarity coefficient SU = 0.365, relative to other products with satisfactory performance across all stations. There were varying degrees of mismatch in unidirectional precipitation and temperature trends, although they were satisfactory in replicating the hydro-climatic information with a low level of uncertainty. Assessment based on multi-criteria decision making revealed that the Climate Research Unit, Global Precipitation Climatology Centre, and Climate Prediction Centre precipitation data and the Climate Research Unit and Princeton University Global Meteorological Forcing temperature data exhibit better performance in terms of similarity, and are recommended for application in hydrological impact studies�especially in the quantification of projected climate hazards and vulnerabilities for better water policy decision making in the Lake Chad basin. © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

Item Type: Article
Impact Factor: cited By 2
Uncontrolled Keywords: Atmospheric temperature; Climatology; Image segmentation; Lakes; Quality control; Water management, Climate; Climate data; Gridded climate data; Lake Chad basins; Multi criteria decision-making; Multicriteria decision-making; Performance; Performance metrices; Regional modelling; Uncertainty, Decision making, air temperature; decision making; modeling; multicriteria analysis; performance assessment; precipitation (climatology), Lake Chad
Depositing User: Ms Sharifah Fahimah Saiyed Yeop
Date Deposited: 25 Mar 2022 02:09
Last Modified: 25 Mar 2022 02:09
URI: http://scholars.utp.edu.my/id/eprint/29594

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