ANALYSIS OF EXTREME RAINS THROUGH CLIMATE INDICATORS IN THE CONTEXT OF CLIMATE CHANGE IN SOUTHERN BENIN.
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Abstract
The recurrence of flooding in recent years in West Africa is dramatically
affecting the socio-economic system of most countries in the region. This work
is devoted to the analysis of the heavy rains of its last years in the context of
global warming in subequatorial Benin through eight rainfall indicators. For this
purpose, the daily rains collected at seventeen stations in the south of Benin
between 1960 and 2018, the maximum and minimum daily temperatures of the
two synoptic stations in the study area between 1970 and 2015 are used. Analysis
of the results shows a non-uniform trend in rainfall indicators over the entire
study period. The monthly trend is in accordance with the bimodal rain regime
of southern Benin for each of the climatic indicators studied. After the break in
the downward trend in rainfall in the 1980s or 1990s at the various stations, the
last three decades have been marked above all by ten-year averages of the various
indicators that are higher than those obtained over the entire study period.
Despite the low proportion of extreme rains, their frequency has increased since
the resumption of rainfall in the 1980s or 1990s, especially compared to the
1970s and 1980s. The highest heights are observed for the most part in the towns
close to the Atlantic Ocean. Global warming in southern Benin is characterized
above all by high decadal temperature variation rates in the 1990s. This
significant global warming in this pivotal decade is accompanied by relatively
large growth in all indicators in southern Benin.
