The Guardian (USA)

America’s summer of floods: climate crisis fueling barrage, scientists say

- Oliver Milman in New York

An entire building and roads washed away by raging waters in Yellowston­e. People desperatel­y swimming from their homes in St Louis. Dozens dead after torrential downpours in Kentucky. The summer of 2022 has been one of extreme floods in the US, with scientists warning the climate crisis is worsening the devastatio­n.

The deadliest of the recent barrage of floods, in Kentucky, was described as “heartbreak­ing” by Joe Biden as he surveyed ruined houses and inundated cars on Monday. At least 37 people died after five days of pounding record rain washed down mountainsi­des and drowned entire towns, an event that scientists say is a once in 1,000 year occurrence.

Such extremes are no longer such outliers, however, with St Louis breaking its one-day rainfall record by 8am on 26 July, swamping city streets and houses, a disaster quickly followed by a similarly severe storm that hit Illinois. On Friday, Death Valley in California, a place known for its searing dry heat, got a year’s worth of rain in just three hours, causing huge sheets of flooding that washed away and damaged hundreds of miles of roads.

In an 11-day span, the US experience­d at least four flooding events that would each normally be expected once every 1,000 years, or have a 0.1% chance of happening in any given year. Scientists say extreme rainfall spurred by climate breakdown is rendering many of these historical norms obsolete.

“We are going to have to change the labeling because these are not onein-1,000-years events any more,” said Andreas Prein, an expert in climate extremes at the National Center for Atmospheri­c Research. “It’s shocking to see all of this flood damage but it follows a pattern. These rare events are becoming more and more common and our infrastruc­ture is just not keeping up.”

America’s summer of flooding has thrown up extraordin­ary spectacles, such as a large building being wrenched from its foundation­s and carried away by surging flood water in Yellowston­e in June. The main road entrances to the national park were severed by what officials called “unpreceden­ted” flooding and took a month to fully reopen.

This week, a dozen motorists had to be rescued from the windows of their cars after intense rainfall caused roads in Denver to become more like swimming pools.

Although flooding has always occurred in the US, the climate crisis is worsening such events, as well as making them more frequent. The federal government’s most recent national climate assessment found that heavy precipitat­ion events have increased in the north-east US by 55% since the 1950s, with such events growing by 27% in the south-east, including Kentucky. The midwest, scene of the record St Louis flooding, has seen a 42% increase in extreme rainfall in this time.

As the Earth’s atmosphere heats up due to the burning of fossil fuels, it holds more water vapor that can be unleashed in huge downpours. Climate change is also causing broader shifts in weather patterns, some of which are still to be fully understood, said Prein.

“Climate change is increasing the intensity and frequency of flooding and it will likely get worse with further warming,” he said. “We are also seeing these repeated storms hit the same area, like Kentucky, again and again in a short period of time, which isn’t well understood. But we know the hot temperatur­es, like the eastern US has just had, has helped build the water in the atmosphere.”

Some places have suffered a disconcert­ing whiplash between severe drought and severe flooding. Heavy rain on parched, drought-ridden land can cause flash flooding and even deadly mudslides.

Las Vegas, in the grip of the worst drought in centuries and a record low level of its main water supply in nearby Lake Mead, saw its streets turn into rivers and its casinos become inundated after flooding rains on 29 July.

“This is a city that is tearing out ornamental grass to save water and then gets flooded like this,” said Prein. “It shows there is an intensific­ation of the hydrologic­al cycle, instead of having an afternoon shower for a couple of days and then fine weather you get these bigger, clustered events that dump a lot of rain very quickly.”

The connection between these increasing­ly disastrous floods and the climate crisis is often unclear to many Americans, including Andy Beshear, governor of Kentucky, who said after the recent disaster in the east of the state, “I wish I could tell you why we keep getting hit here in Kentucky … I cannot give you the why, but I know what we do in response. The answer is, everything we can.”

Kentucky was hit by large floods last year, too, and finds itself at a “crux” of extreme weather, according to Megan Schargorod­ski, the interim state climatolog­ist. The state is now routinely subjected to scorching heat, drought and tornadoes, as well as floods.

“People here were hit by tornadoes in December and were still emotionall­y recharging from that when this new tragic event happened,” Schargorod­ski said. “It’s barely enough time to recover – we are being bombarded by one significan­t weather event after another.

“We are a very conservati­ve state so we stray away from explicitly mentioning climate change because some people stop listening. But we can talk about the trends and the need to adapt. If you’re not prepared in securing your home and ensuring your exit routes, you’re going to face a lot more risks. So preparedne­ss is what we need to focus on.”

 ?? Photograph: Derik Holtmann/AP ?? Severe flooding in East St Louis, Illinois, in late July.
Photograph: Derik Holtmann/AP Severe flooding in East St Louis, Illinois, in late July.
 ?? Photograph: David Goldman/AP ?? A road ends where flood waters washed away a house in Gardiner, Montana, in June.
Photograph: David Goldman/AP A road ends where flood waters washed away a house in Gardiner, Montana, in June.

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