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Floods and Droughts
Floods and droughts are the two important aspects of hydrological hazard. Floods usually result either from heavy precipitation (rain or snow) or from rapid snowmelt or glacier discharge (CliC). Droughts are caused by dry weather conditions in which evaporation exceeds the available surface water. They are frequently characterised by water shortages. Understanding the causes and forecasting of heavy or scant precipitation and high evaporative demand (and hence of floods and droughts) form an important objective of the WCRP. The WCRP research examines these two types of extreme hydrological events in a variety of ways.

The WCRP project, Global Energy and Water Cycle Experiment (GEWEX), is the main area that researches the planet’s hydrological cycle in all its aspects including its variability and change. GEWEX focuses on land and its role in causing floods and droughts. Another WCRP project, Climate Variability and Predictability (CLIVAR), facilitates research into floods and droughts resulting from impacts of atmospheric and oceanic variability. The modelling and prediction of excess or lack of precipitation is an important objective of the WCRP/CAS (Commission on Atmospheric Sciences) Working Group on Numerical Experimentation (WGNE). The natural variability of floods and droughts and their change are studied by the WCRP Working Group on Coupled Modelling (WGCM) and the CLIVAR Working Group on Seasonal to Interannual Prediction (WGSIP). While these activities study physical aspects of floods and droughts, the Global Water System Project (GWSP) of the Earth System Science Partnership (ESSP) focusses on how humans are changing the global water cycle, thus impacting floods and droughts.

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