Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

As the planet gets warmer, expect intense, extreme rain

NO NET GAIN Short bursts of extreme precipitat­ion do not reduce water stress or help recharge the water table. Instead, they often lead to flash floods

- Malavika Vyawahare letters@hindustant­imes.com n

Intense bursts of rain and continuous downpours have increased across towns and cities over the past few decades, with Bangalore receiving 35% of its annual average rainfall this year even before the onset of the monsoon. Last year, Ahmedabad (180mm in 24 hours) and in 2005, Mumbai Metropolit­an Region got flooded when it didn’t stop pouring (994 mm in a 24 hours).

“The number of days with heavy rainfall is increasing and the number of days with light rainfall is decreasing,” M Mohapatra, senior official at the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD), said. “The same amount of rainfall is happening over a fewer days.”

The monsoon season is a dangerous and unsettling time in India, with most deaths reported from heavy rains and flooding in the four months of rain from June to September.

“Increasing trends in daily extreme precipitat­ion in India have been observed during the recent decades,” said a recent study published in Geophysica­l Research Letters in June this year.

“Moreover, urban areas in India have witnessed eccentric precipitat­ion extremes in the past, which have affected human lives and infrastruc­ture.”

Between 1950 and 2017, India has reported 285 floods that have impacted 850 million people, left 19 million homeless and killed about 71,000. In the past decade. Flood damage has led to losses of ₹ 206 billion every year, according to the Internatio­nal Disaster Database.

But the short bursts of extreme precipitat­ion worry scientists .

Such events may boost the total amount of rainfall but they do not necessaril­y reduce water stress or significan­tly recharge the water table.

On the contrary, much of the rain discharge is difficult to manage and often causes flash floods, which are detrimenta­l to infrastruc­ture.

Incidences of extreme rainfall, that precipitat­e flooding, are projected to increase as the planet warms. India is not just prone to weather-related disasters. Its high population density and poor infrastruc­ture also put more people at higher risk.

In the last two years alone, 25 million people have suffered impacts from heavy rains and floods and at least 2,000 people have died in these episodes.

In India, both large-scale floods from continuous heavy downpours and flash floods from sudden bursts of rain are expected to strike more often.

“A warming climate will cause more intense and more frequent extreme rain events,” Vimal Mishra, a climate scientist at IIT Gandhinaga­r and co-author of the paper, said. The increase in rainfall extremes is being driven by anthropoge­nic warming, Mishra and his colleagues said in a 2018 paper, noting that in the worst case scenario of unchecked greenhouse gas emissions, such events will increase significan­tly over south and central India by 2050.

“For cities, daily rainfall data is not that helpful, even 5-10 minutes of heavy rain can flood a city and pose a risk to the infrastruc­ture,” Mishra said.

Which is why the scientist is calling for improving understand­ing of sub-daily rainfall patterns that include rainfall spurts over less than 24 hours. “There isn’t enough focus on sub-daily rainfall events,” he said.

A paper by Mishra and his team showed that such short duration rainfall events that can trigger flash floods are even more sensitive to warming temperatur­es than 24-hour rainfall extremes.

If there is an increase in average temperatur­es of 1° Celsius, there would be a greater increase in the events of sub-daily rainfall extremes than daily extremes.

The researcher­s found that the frequency of such events would increase by 20% if global temperatur­e rises by 1.5° Celsius and by 25% if they increase by 2 ° Celsius over pre-industrial level. Other researcher­s have reached similar conclusion­s about widespread extreme rains that causes flooding.

“We looked at the entire country and found a threefold increase in widespread extreme rain events over central India,” Roxy Mathew Koll, a climate scientist at Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorolog­y, Pune, said. “Barring a few pockets of the country, the country overall is likely to see an increase in such events.”

Widespread rainfall events that occur over multiple days and cover a large swathe of area (running into thousands of square km) are known to cause largescale floods. The 2005 Maharashtr­a flood on July 26 and July 27, which led to over 1,000 deaths across the state and brought Mumbai to a standstill, is an example of this. When temperatur­e increases, it raises the moisture-holding capacity of the atmosphere.

Scientists have reported an increase in moisture content in the atmosphere over the Indian subcontine­nt.

While this may sound like good news, the distributi­on of the rain over space and time muddies such a straightfo­rward understand­ing.

More rain is not a blessing when it is dumped over short periods of time.

It’s not just local warming, but regionwide warming that is having an impact on India’s rainfall patterns, according to Koll. “It is not the local temperatur­es, warming that is not even exactly over the Indian subcontine­nt has resulted in more moisture availabili­ty,” he explained.

“It is coming from the Arabian Sea, so warming elsewhere will also impact extreme rainfall events over Indian subcontine­nt,” Koll said.

 ?? PTI ?? The monsoon season is a dangerous and unsettling time in India, with most deaths reported from heavy rains and flooding in the four months from June to September.
PTI The monsoon season is a dangerous and unsettling time in India, with most deaths reported from heavy rains and flooding in the four months from June to September.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India