Evaluating satellite and reanalysis rainfall estimates for climate services in agriculture: a comprehensive methodology
Danny Parsons, David Stern, Denis Ndanguza, Mouhamadou Bamba Sylla, James Musyoka, John Bagiliko, Graham Clarkson, Peter Dorward

TL;DR
This paper introduces a detailed framework for assessing the suitability of satellite and reanalysis rainfall data for agricultural use, emphasizing comparison with ground measurements to enhance climate services in data-scarce regions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive, step-by-step methodology for evaluating rainfall estimates for specific agricultural applications, filling a gap in existing validation approaches.
Findings
Demonstrated the methodology with five rainfall products across Africa and the Caribbean.
Showed how to assess the usability of rainfall data for targeted agricultural purposes.
Highlighted the importance of location-specific validation for climate services.
Abstract
High-resolution rainfall estimates from satellite and reanalysis sources (SRE) could play a major role in improving climate services for agriculture. This is particularly relevant in regions that rely on rain-fed farming but lack a dense network of ground-based measurements to provide localised historical climate information, as in most of the Global South. However, there is a need for a framework which practitioners can use to determine the suitability of these estimated data for specific agricultural applications. This paper presents a comprehensive methodology for evaluating the ability of SRE to provide historical rainfall information for agricultural applications, primarily through comparison with ground-based measurements. The methodology comprises five main steps: data selection and pre-processing, spatial and temporal consistency checks, quantitative SRE-gauge comparisons, bias…
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