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Performance evaluation of satellite-based rainfall estimates for hydrological modeling over Bilate river basin, Ethiopia

Awel Haji Ibrahim (Faculty of Meteorology and Hydrology, AWTI, Arba Minch University, Arba Minch, Ethiopia)
Dagnachew Daniel Molla (Faculty of Meteorology and Hydrology, AWTI, Arba Minch University, Arba Minch, Ethiopia)
Tarun Kumar Lohani (Faculty of Hydraulic and Water Resources Engineering, AWTI, Arba Minch University, Arba Minch, Ethiopia)

World Journal of Engineering

ISSN: 1708-5284

Article publication date: 16 August 2022

Issue publication date: 12 January 2024

219

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to address a highly heterogeneous rift margin environment and exhibit considerable spatiotemporal hydro-climatic variations. In spite of limited, random and inaccurate data retrieved from rainfall gauging stations, the recent advancement of satellite rainfall estimate (SRE) has provided promising alternatives over such remote areas. The aim of this research is to take advantage of the technologies through performance evaluation of the SREs against ground-based-gauge rainfall data sets by incorporating its applicability in calibrating hydrological models.

Design/methodology/approach

Selected multi satellite-based rainfall estimates were primarily compared statistically with rain gauge observations using a point-to-pixel approach at different time scales (daily and seasonal). The continuous and categorical indices are used to evaluate the performance of SRE. The simple scaling time-variant bias correction method was further applied to remove the systematic error in satellite rainfall estimates before being used as input for a semi-distributed hydrologic engineering center's hydraulic modeling system (HEC-HMS). Runoff calibration and validation were conducted for consecutive periods ranging from 1999–2010 to 2011–2015, respectively.

Findings

The spatial patterns retrieved from climate hazards group infrared precipitation with stations (CHIRPS), multi-source weighted-ensemble precipitation (MSWEP) and tropical rainfall measuring mission (TRMM) rainfall estimates are more or less comparably underestimate the ground-based gauge observation at daily and seasonal scales. In comparison to the others, MSWEP has the best probability of detection followed by TRMM at all observation stations whereas CHIRPS performs the least in the study area. Accordingly, the relative calibration performance of the hydrological model (HEC-HMS) using ground-based gauge observation (Nash and Sutcliffe efficiency criteria [NSE] = 0.71; R2 = 0.72) is better as compared to MSWEP (NSE = 0.69; R2 = 0.7), TRMM (NSE = 0.67, R2 = 0.68) and CHIRPS (NSE = 0.58 and R2 = 0.62).

Practical implications

Calibration of hydrological model using the satellite rainfall estimate products have promising results. The results also suggest that products can be a potential alternative source of data sparse complex rift margin having heterogeneous characteristics for various water resource related applications in the study area.

Originality/value

This research is an original work that focuses on all three satellite rainfall estimates forced simulations displaying substantially improved performance after bias correction and recalibration.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge Arba Minch University for providing all sorts of logistic support in conducting this research.

Citation

Ibrahim, A.H., Molla, D.D. and Lohani, T.K. (2024), "Performance evaluation of satellite-based rainfall estimates for hydrological modeling over Bilate river basin, Ethiopia", World Journal of Engineering, Vol. 21 No. 1, pp. 1-15. https://doi.org/10.1108/WJE-03-2022-0106

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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