Intense convection, featuring large vertical motions and water phase changes, has profound consequences for many aspects of atmospheric and climate science. Intense convection is a major source of weather hazards due to its association with heavy rain, damaging winds, and large hail. Worldwide, the daily economic loss related to intense convection is about 108 million US dollars over the period 1970(WMO, 2021. In the context of climate, intense convection plays a critical role in Earth's energy balance, as intense convection modulates radiative balance through its effect on both the incoming solar radiation and the outgoing longwave radiation. Furthermore, intense convection modulates energy transfer dynamically and thermodynamically within the atmosphere.Previous global model studies (e.g., Diffenbaugh et al., 2013) argued that a warming climate is likely to enhance the frequency and intensity of intense convection. The argument, however, is based on the analysis of convective environmental proxies (e.g., low-level wind shear and convective available potential energy [CAPE]), rather than the simulation of the convection itself. This limitation arises because traditional climate models have too coarse a grid to simulate intense convection explicitly. Alternatively, high-resolution regional dynamical downscaling can simulate intense convection explicitly (e.g., Hoogewind et al., 2017). However, those regional studies cannot reveal the full global distribution of intense convection.