Assessing robustness in global hydrological predictions by comparing modelling and Earth observations

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Abstract

Hydrological modelling to support hypotheses on Earth system boundaries or the accelerating water crisis is nowadays done at the global scale, with difficulties associated to model uncertainties. Here we bring a robustness analysis of internal model variables as an additional tool for model evaluation using data from six Earth observation products and the global catchment model World-Wide HYPE in a comparative study. The assessment shows that: (i) variables have high agreement in mid-latitude temperate regions; (ii) the variables with higher agreement, and associated with good model performance in streamflow, were actual evapotranspiration, fractional snow cover and snow water equivalent; and (iii) changes in total water storage showed very poor agreement, probably due to an insufficient number of aquifers in the model set-up. We propose this procedure as a standard complementary method in global hydrological modelling, highlighting the importance of justifying models before using them for scenario analysis or water accounting.

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Pimentel, R., Crochemore, L., Andersson, J. C. M., & Arheimer, B. (2023). Assessing robustness in global hydrological predictions by comparing modelling and Earth observations. Hydrological Sciences Journal, 68(16), 2357–2372. https://doi.org/10.1080/02626667.2023.2267544

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