Times Colonist

BUILDING FOR EXTREME WEATHER

More intense precipitat­ion— and the resulting damage—projected in a changing climate

- BY JODY PATERSON

In a warming world, most extreme weather events become even more extreme. Temperatur­e records are broken and wildfire risks rise. Heavy rains and “pineapple express” events intensify. Extremes that once happened every 50 years begin to happen more often. Now, the work of a postdoctor­al scientist at the University of Victoria's Pacific Climate Impacts Consortium (PCIC) has updated global figures on daily extreme precipitat­ion and confirmed that extreme rainstorms are intensifyi­ng and becoming more frequent in much of the world.

Climatolog­ist Qiaohong Sun worked with 69 years of data from 7,293 weather stations, mostly from North America, Asia and Europe, but also some from Australia, Africa and South America. She found that extreme one-day rain storms have intensifie­d at 68 per cent of the stations, and intensific­ation was statistica­lly significan­t at about 10 per cent of them. These heavy rainfalls are growing more intense with each degree of warming.

One in 10 stations may not sound like much, says PCIC Director and climatolog­ist Francis Zwiers. But compared to what researcher­s would expect to see in an unchanging climate, it’s four times higher. Sun’s research also supports what climatolog­ists expect from theory: That for every degree of global warming, the intensity of extreme rainfall events goes up by about seven per cent.

That means that if the global climate warms by three degrees, extreme precipitat­ion events around the world will be about 20 per cent more intense than they are now, says Sun. The findings emphasize the need to build for a changing world, she adds.

More intense rain storms will bring more damage, for example, from overwhelme­d storm drains and backed-up sewage systems. Homeowners, municipali­ties and provincial government­s all have a stake in mitigating and managing the impact of extreme precipitat­ion events, says Zwiers.

“If an extreme event used to mean 50 millimetre­s of precipitat­ion and it warms by one degree, that event is now 53.5 millimetre­s. So, is that important?” asks Zwiers. “One way to answer that is to think about where you live, and the fact that the storm sewers have fixed capacity. If rainfalls exceeding that capacity start to happen more often, then costly damage will also start to happen more often.”

PCIC is a regional climate service centre located at UVic, providing practical informatio­n on the physical impacts of climate variabilit­y and change in Canada’s Pacific and Yukon regions. The increase in the climate service centre's staff to 31 from 13 in the decade that Zwiers has led it highlights the rising demand for climate knowledge and the tools PCIC develops to help with long-term planning.

Zwiers notes that many organizati­ons are beginning to take the latest research on climate change into account in their policies. For example, BC’s Ministry of Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture requires that new engineerin­g designs for provincial transporta­tion infrastruc­ture incorporat­e climate projection­s and risk analysis.

Sun’s study was funded by the Pan‐Canadian Global Water Futures research program. Her work is an important contributi­on to the growing body of climate studies that are informing government, developers, insurance companies and the public as they prepare for a new reality in a warming world, says Zwiers.

 ?? PHOTO: UVIC PHOTO SERVICES ?? Zwiers (left) and Sun at the Gonzales Hill Observator­y.
PHOTO: UVIC PHOTO SERVICES Zwiers (left) and Sun at the Gonzales Hill Observator­y.

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