RESEARCH PROJECT

Machine learning for high-resolution downscaling in the Hawaiian Islands

With their tops in the clouds and crossed by a vibrant rainbow, steep, eroded green mountains drop abruptly to a calm ocean coastline
Rainfall is integral to the landscapes and ecosystems of Hawaii, so being able to adequately and accurately predict shifts in precipitation with climate change is critical. (Photo: CCby2.0, dbking)

Climate change could significantly alter precipitation patterns in tropical islands like the state of Hawaiʻi with significant consequences for water resources. Unfortunately, models of global climate change have insufficient resolution to model the processes that generate most rainfall in Hawaiʻi. Specialized models are needed to predict how global changes will affect local climate, including statistical models trained on historical data.

This project will develop machine learning methods to predict precipitation at locations where no measurement data is available, using contemporaneous rainfall measurements (or downscaled projections of future rainfall) at other locations. Compared to traditional methods that rely on interpolation between stations, this project will use machine learning to leverage information about the orography to inform these predictions. With improved models for spatial interpolation, the project will produce historical rainfall maps at unprecedented resolution and accuracy. The project will also evaluate this as a method for projecting future rainfall and compare against existing statistical downscaling models. These historical and future rainfall maps will be shared via the Hawaiʻi Climate Data Portal to help stakeholders better understand the effect of climate change on water resources in the state of Hawaiʻi.

PROJECT DETAILS

FUNDED:

FY2024

PI:

Peter Sadowski
Associate Professor of Computer Science, UH Mānoa

Graduate Scholar:

Yusuke Hatanaka
Dept of Information and Computer Science, UH Mānoa

Co-I:

Thomas Giambelluca
Professor of Geography, UH Mānoa