2.3. Climate scenarios
The SWAP model was driven by 100-year long stochastic
simulations of daily precipitation, air temperature and potential
evapotranspiration, representative of a stationary climate for the
periods 1961–1990 (“baseline”) and 2071–2100 (“future”). The
time series were generated by the stochastic rainfall model
RainsimV3 (Burton et al., 2008) and the Climatic Research Unit
(CRU)weather generator (Kilsby et al., 2007;Watts et al., 2004)
by applying change factors (CF) (Prudhomme et al., 2002)
derived from an ensemble of PRUDENCE RCM experiments. The
generation of these time series is described in detail in Van Vliet
et al. (in press).
2.3. Climate scenariosThe SWAP model was driven by 100-year long stochasticsimulations of daily precipitation, air temperature and potentialevapotranspiration, representative of a stationary climate for theperiods 1961–1990 (“baseline”) and 2071–2100 (“future”). Thetime series were generated by the stochastic rainfall modelRainsimV3 (Burton et al., 2008) and the Climatic Research Unit(CRU)weather generator (Kilsby et al., 2007;Watts et al., 2004)by applying change factors (CF) (Prudhomme et al., 2002)derived from an ensemble of PRUDENCE RCM experiments. Thegeneration of these time series is described in detail in Van Vlietet al. (in press).
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