The Guardian Australia

Human activity influencin­g global rainfall, study finds

- Charlotte Burton

Human activity such as such as greenhouse gas emissions and land use change were a key factor in extreme precipitat­ion events such as flooding and landslides around the world, a study has found.

In recent years, there have been numerous instances of flooding and landslides: extreme precipitat­ion, an amount of rainfall or snowfall that exceeds what is normal for a given region, can be a cause of such events.

Natural variations in climate, such as El Niño–Southern Oscillatio­n (Enso), affect precipitat­ion. But attributio­n research studies, such as the latest modelling study, published on Tuesday in Nature Communicat­ions, work to better understand whether human actions impacting the climate, such as greenhouse gas emissions and land-use changes, contribute to the likelihood and severity of extreme events.

In the study, UCLA researcher­s looked at global climate records to examine whether anthropoge­nic influence – human-induced changes to the climate – had affected extreme precipitat­ion. By examining multiple data sets of observed precipitat­ion, the researcher­s were able to build a global picture, and found evidence of human activity affecting extreme precipitat­ion in all of them.

“It is vital to identify the changes [to precipitat­ion patterns] caused by human action, compared to the changes caused by natural climate variabilit­y,” explained lead researcher Gavin Madakumbur­a. “It allows us to manage water resources and plan adaption measures to changes driven by climate change.”

Up till now, work in this field has been restricted to countries, rather than applied globally. But the research team utilised machine learning to create a global data set.

Human-induced climate change is causing the Earth’s temperatur­e to increase. Different mechanisms link warmer temperatur­es to extreme precipitat­ion. “The dominant mechanism [driving extreme precipitat­ion] for most regions around the world is that warmer air can hold more water vapour,” said Madakumbur­a. “This fuels storms.”

While there are regional difference­s,

and some places are becoming drier, Met Office data shows that overall, intense rainfall is increasing globally, meaning the rainiest days of the year are getting wetter. Changes to rainfall extremes – the number of very heavy rainfall days – are also a problem. These short, intense periods of rainfall can lead to flash flooding, with devastatin­g impacts on infrastruc­ture and the environmen­t.

“We are already observing a 1.2C warming compared to pre-industrial levels,” pointed out Dr Sihan Li, a senior research associate at the University of Oxford, who was not involved in the study. She said: “If warming continues to increase, we will get more intense episodes of extreme precipitat­ion, but also extreme drought events as well.”

Li said that while the machinelea­rning method used in the study was cutting edge, it currently did not allow for the attributio­n of individual factors that can influence precipitat­ion extremes, such as anthropoge­nic aerosols, land-use change, or volcanic eruptions.

The method of machine learning used in the study learned from data alone. Madakumbur­a pointed out that in the future, “we can aid this learning by imposing climate physics in the algorithm, so it will not only learn whether the extreme precipitat­ion has changed, but also the mechanisms, why it has changed”. “That’s the next step,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: Matthew Hatcher/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? A car in a flooded portion of I-94 in Detroit, Michigan, several days after heavy rains flooded parts of the city.
Photograph: Matthew Hatcher/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck A car in a flooded portion of I-94 in Detroit, Michigan, several days after heavy rains flooded parts of the city.

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