Trend of near-surface maximum wind speed in China: under a shifted East Asian monsoon scenario
Póster presentado en: EGU General Assembly 2018 celebrada del 8 al 13 de abril en Viena, Austria. ; The current global climate research has traditionally focused on changes in air temperature and precipitation. As a key climate parameter, changes of winds have a very significant impact on the environment, such as soil wind erosion, air pollution diffusion, wind power energy, etc. In particular, changes of extreme wind speed (i.e., wind gusts) are poorly analyzed and deserve further investigation. In this study we assess trends in máximum wind speed (MWS) across China for 1975-2016, using observed daily wind datasets, and also analyze its relationship with the East Asian monsoon. The raw observed MWS dataset was subject to aquality control and robust homogenization protocol using the Climatol package. The results reveal a statistically significant (p0.10). Even though MWS declines dominated across much of the country through out the year, only as mal number of stations showed statistically significant negative trends in summer (37.7 %) and spring (29.0 %). Our preliminary analyses show that the weakened East Asian monsoon, particularly in winter, positively correlates with the observed changes in MWS. However, statistical significant correlations are too few and further attribution analyses are strongly needed. ; This research is funded by (i) the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No.41621061); (ii) the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant (Grant No. 703733); and (iii) the Swedish Research Council by the project "Detection and attribution of changes in extreme wind gusts over land" (2017-03780).