ENSO and IOD Influence on Extreme Rainfall in Indonesia: Historical and Future Analysis

Risyda Hanifa, Joko Wiratmo

Abstract

Indonesia, as a maritime continent, is vulnerable to environmental disasters such as floods and landslides due to extreme rainfall. This study aims to identify changes in the influence of ENSO and IOD on extreme rainfall across Indonesia, specifically during the September-October-November period. We used rainfall and sea surface temperature data from the CMIP6 climate model for the historical period (1985-2014), near-future (2031-2060), and far-future (2061-2090) projections under SSP2-4.5 and SSP 5-8.5 climate scenarios. The relation between rainfall dan ENSO/IOD was simply defined by linear regression approach. We analyzed the change of influence by comparing the historical and the future condition. The results indicated that the changes in the teleconnection of ENSO and IOD to extreme rainfall in future is consistently negative, except for Java (near-future) and Kalimantan and southern Sumatra (far-future). Our finding revealed that significant changes in the teleconnection varied throughout maritime continent. The maximum change was found in Northern Kalimantan, which reached values of -80 mm/°C due to ENSO and -180 mm/°C due to IOD for near future. These findings highlight the spatial variability in teleconnection changes across Indonesia, underscoring the need for region-specific climate adaptation measures in response to evolving extreme rainfall patterns.

Authors

Risyda Hanifa
Joko Wiratmo
joko.wiratmo@meteo.itb.ac.id (Primary Contact)
HanifaR., & WiratmoJ. (2024). ENSO and IOD Influence on Extreme Rainfall in Indonesia: Historical and Future Analysis . Agromet, 38(2), 78-87. https://doi.org/10.29244/j.agromet.38.2.78-87

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