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Modernizing Probable Maximum Precipitation Estimation

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A committee-supported project or activity that has been completed and for which output dissemination has begun. Its committee has been disbanded and closeout procedures are underway.

This study committee will consider approaches for estimating probable maximum precipitation (PMP) in a changing climate, with the goal of recommending an updated approach, appropriate for decision-maker needs. PMP is commonly used in the design of critical infrastructure. The committee is charged with establishing a common understanding of PMP; reviewing and assessing existing approaches to PMP estimation and for incorporating the impacts of climate change on those estimates; assessing PMP data needs and sources; and recommending a preferred approach for PMP estimation that incorporates the impacts of climate change and the characterization of uncertainty.

Description

The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine will convene an ad hoc committee to consider approaches for estimating probable maximum precipitation (PMP) in a changing climate, with the goal of recommending an updated approach, appropriate for decision-maker needs.
More specifically, the study will:

  • Establish a common understanding of PMP, considering the range of public- and private-sector users, current and future uses, and spatial and temporal scales for decision-making based on PMP estimates, from state to regional levels.
  • Review and assess: 1) existing and emerging approaches for PMP estimation, including novel numerical weather prediction and high-performance computing techniques, and 2) approaches to incorporate the impacts of climate change on extreme precipitation into PMP estimation.
  • Assess data needs and sources, for PMP estimation and evaluation, and best practices for transparency and accessibility of resulting PMP estimate data and information.
  • Recommend a preferred approach for PMP estimation that incorporates the impacts of climate change and the characterization of uncertainty.

The Committee will make recommendations for the development of an updated approach that can serve as a national standard for estimating probable maximum precipitation in a changing climate.

Collaborators

Committee

Chair

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Sponsors

Department of Commerce

Staff

Steven Stichter

Lead

Jonathan Tucker

Lead

Anne Manville

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