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Assessing the Geographic Generalization and Physical Consistency of Generative Models for Climate Downscaling

Published: October 15, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2510.13722v1

By: Carlo Saccardi , Maximilian Pierzyna , Haitz Sáez de Ocáriz Borde and more

Potential Business Impact:

Makes weather forecasts more accurate everywhere.

Business Areas:
Simulation Software

Kilometer-scale weather data is crucial for real-world applications but remains computationally intensive to produce using traditional weather simulations. An emerging solution is to use deep learning models, which offer a faster alternative for climate downscaling. However, their reliability is still in question, as they are often evaluated using standard machine learning metrics rather than insights from atmospheric and weather physics. This paper benchmarks recent state-of-the-art deep learning models and introduces physics-inspired diagnostics to evaluate their performance and reliability, with a particular focus on geographic generalization and physical consistency. Our experiments show that, despite the seemingly strong performance of models such as CorrDiff, when trained on a limited set of European geographies (e.g., central Europe), they struggle to generalize to other regions such as Iberia, Morocco in the south, or Scandinavia in the north. They also fail to accurately capture second-order variables such as divergence and vorticity derived from predicted velocity fields. These deficiencies appear even in in-distribution geographies, indicating challenges in producing physically consistent predictions. We propose a simple initial solution: introducing a power spectral density loss function that empirically improves geographic generalization by encouraging the reconstruction of small-scale physical structures. The code for reproducing the experimental results can be found at https://github.com/CarloSaccardi/PSD-Downscaling

Country of Origin
🇳🇱 Netherlands

Repos / Data Links

Page Count
17 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Machine Learning (CS)