Lethbridge Herald

Danger of extreme rains on the rise

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

The rains soaked southern Alberta for days, unrelentin­g, saturating soil already sodden with melting snow — and before long Calgary was awash as rivers overflowed their banks.

The province described the 2013 flood as the worst in its history, but it might not be for long. Research from Environmen­t Canada shows that climate change is behind more extreme rainfalls in Canada and suggests the problem is likely to get worse.

“If we continue with global warming, we will see continued increase in the frequency and severity of extreme precipitat­ion,” said Megan Kirchmeier-Young, co-author of a paper published Monday in the Proceeding­s of the National Academies of Sciences.

Researcher­s combined computer models and observed data for the most specific look yet at how climate change affects the kind of damaging rainfalls that turn streets to rivers.

The idea stems from simple physics. Because warm air holds more moisture than cool air, an atmosphere heated by climate change should hold more water and dump larger amounts of it. Showing that, however, is more complex. Previous research on extreme rainfall patterns hasn’t been able to achieve a finer scale than the average of the entire Western Hemisphere. Now, scientists have been able to focus on regions within the United States and Canada — what’s happening, why, and what’s coming down the road.

They began with figures from a variety of locations for the maximum amount of rain falling over a one-day period and over a five-day period.

They did four separate calculatio­ns for the probabilit­y of those rainfall amounts occurring each year over a 50-year period from 1961 to 2010. Three were based on climate models that incorporat­ed real-world data on increasing greenhouse gas levels, while the fourth was calculated directly from observed figures.

All four calculatio­ns showed increasing chances of extreme precipitat­ion. The result from the observed data showed the highest increase, with chances of one-day heavy rainfall increasing by more than five per cent.

Five-day rainfalls showed similar patterns. “We’re finding (that) extreme precipitat­ion increases in the models that have this human influence (greenhouse gases) agrees well with the increases we’re seeing in the observatio­ns,” Kirchmeier-Young said.

Such studies not only help scientists understand the past. Comparing modelled results with real-world measuremen­ts increases their ability to look ahead.

“If we have that, we can have more confidence in what the model is telling us what will happen in the future.”

All three models in the study showed the chance of over-the-top rainfalls is expected to increase far into the future.

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