Texarkana Gazette

Warming to make storms larger and more frequent

- By Seth Borenstein

WASHINGTON— Summer thundersto­rms in North America will likely be larger, wetter and more frequent in a warmer world, dumping 80 percent more rain in some areas and worsening flooding, a new study says.

Future storms will also be wilder, soaking entire cities and huge portions of states, according to a federally-funded study released Monday in the journal Nature Climate Change.

The U.S. in recent years has experience­d prolonged drenchings that have doused Nashville in 2010, West Virginia and Louisiana in 2016 and Houston this year. The disasters cost $20 billion a year in damage.

By the end of century if emissions aren’t curbed, these gully washers will be much worse as they will get bigger, said Andreas Prein, a climate scientist at the National Center for Atmospheri­c Research in Boulder, Colorado, who led the study.

Prein and colleagues used high-resolution computer simulation­s to see how global warming will likely change the large thundersto­rms that are already daily summer events in North America. Previous studies projected more frequent and wetter storms, but this is the first research to show they likely will be more widespread, covering an entire city instead of just half of it, Prein said.

With the size of the storm factored in, the total amount of rain in the U.S. South is projected to jump 80 percent between now and the end of the century, Prein said. For Mexico, the increase in rainfall would be 70 percent and 60 percent in the U.S. Southwest. Canada and the rest of the U.S. should expect a 40 percent rain increase from current levels.

These types of storms include tropical storms, but most of the storms studied are average thundersto­rms.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States