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High water in Elkview, West Virginia, when the state saw rainfall of 25cm on 24 June 2016.
High water in Elkview, West Virginia, when the state saw rainfall of 25cm on 24 June 2016. Photograph: Reuters
High water in Elkview, West Virginia, when the state saw rainfall of 25cm on 24 June 2016. Photograph: Reuters

US could see extreme rains increase of 400% by end of century

This article is more than 7 years old

As global temperatures rise, extreme downpours will increase putting huge strains on infrastructure and agriculture, finds climate study. Climate Central reports

When the skies open up and deluge an area, the results can be catastrophic, with roads washed out and homes destroyed by the resulting flash floods. Such extreme downpours are already occurring more often across the US, but a new study finds that as global temperatures rise, storms could dump considerably more rain and skyrocket in frequency.

The study, in the journal Nature Climate Change, suggests that storms that now occur about once a season could happen five times a season by the century’s end, a 400% increase.

And when such storms do occur, they could produce up to 70% more rain. That means that an intense thunderstorm that would today drop about 5cm (2 inches) of rain would drop 9cm in the future.

Such massive amounts of rain occurring more often could put significant strain on infrastructure that already struggles to deal with heavy rainfall, as seen across the country this year in places from Louisiana to West Virginia.

“I think this is one of the most severe consequences of climate change, at least in the US,” said the study’s co-author, Andreas Prein, of the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado.

Heavy downpours have already increased across the entire continental US, according to the 2014 National Climate Assessment, mostly notably in the north-east, where they have risen by 71%.

Such an increase in extreme precipitation is expected as temperatures rise due to heat-trapping greenhouse gases accumulating in the atmosphere. One of the basic properties of the atmosphere is that moisture increases with temperature. That means when a storm forms, it has more moisture available to fuel rains.

Several extreme rainfall events have already been made more likely because of warming, analyses have shown.

“We see this in the real climate already. It will only intensify,” Prein said.

The most extreme rains happen in convective storms, or ones that feature rapidly rising air at their core. These storms happen on scales too small for global climate models to capture, though, meaning they can’t provide a detailed look at rainfall trends.

The expected increase in the number of summertime storms that produce extreme precipitation at century’s end compared to 2000-2013. Photograph: Andreas Prein/NCAR

To get down to the level of those storms, the NCAR researchers used a higher-resolution model that captures finer details, but takes much longer to run – in this case, an entire year.

What they found was that if greenhouse gas emissions continue on their current path, the storms that produce the most intense rainfall will increase broadly across the Lower 48.

The Gulf and Atlantic coasts, where oceans provide abundant moisture, would see some of the biggest increases in frequency and rainfall amounts.

But even in the central portions of the country, which are expected to get drier overall as rising temperatures cause more soil evaporation, the most intense storms will drop more rain in the future. Essentially, the region will see fewer of the moderate storms that are a crucial source of water now and more of the intense storms.

That shift has serious implications for agriculture, one of the main economic drivers in the region, as heavy rains can be damaging to crops.

However, if the world, including the US, acts to limit emissions over the coming decades, these increases in rainfall won’t be as large.

“It’s really in our hands to change that if we want to,” Prein said.

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