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Abstract
In the period 2015–2017, the Western Cape region has suffered from three consecutive years of below average rainfall—leading to a prolonged drought and acute water shortages, most prominently in the city of Cape Town. After testing that the precipitation deficit is the primary driver behind the reduced surface water availability, we undertake a multi-method attribution analysis for the meteorological drought, defined in terms of a deficit in the 3 years running mean precipitation averaged over the Western Cape area. The exact estimate of the return time of the event is sensitive to the number of stations whose data is incorporated in the analysis but the rarity of the event is unquestionable, with a return time of more than a hundred years. Synthesising the results from five different large model ensembles as well as observed data gives a significant increase by a factor of three (95% confidence interval 1.5–6) of such a drought to occur because of anthropogenic climate change. All the model results further suggest that this trend will continue with future global warming. These results are in line with physical understanding of the effect of climate change at these latitudes and highlights that measures to improve Cape Town’s resilience to future droughts are an adaptation priority.
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1 Environmental Change Institute, University of Oxford, OX1 3QY Oxford, United Kingdom
2 Climate System Analysis Group, University of Cape Town, South Africa
3 Climate and Global Dynamics Laboratory, National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO, United States of America
4 KNMI, De Bilt, The Netherlands
5 Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre, The Hague, Netherlands
6 African Climate and Development Initiative, University of Cape Town, South Africa
7 Environmental Change Institute, University of Oxford, OX1 3QY Oxford, United Kingdom; Barcelona Supercomputing Center (BSC), Barcelona, Spain
8 African Climate and Development Initiative, University of Cape Town, South Africa; School of International Development, University of East Anglia, Norwich, United Kingdom