Malta Independent

Atmospheri­c river storms can drive costly flooding – and climate change is making them stronger

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Ask people to name the world’s largest river, and most will probably guess that it’s the Amazon, the Nile or the Mississipp­i. In fact, some of Earth’s largest rivers are in the sky – and they can produce powerful storms, like those currently soaking the Pacific Northwest.

Atmospheri­c rivers are long, narrow bands of moisture in the atmosphere that extend from the tropics to higher latitudes. These rivers in the sky can transport 15 times the volume of the Mississipp­i River. When that moisture reaches the coast and moves inland, it rises over the mountains, generating rain and snowfall and sometimes causing extreme flooding.

In the past 20 years, as observatio­n networks have improved, scientists have learned more about these important weather phenomena. Atmospheri­c rivers occur globally, affecting the west coasts of the world’s major land masses, including Portugal, western Europe, Chile and South Africa. So-called “Pineapple Express” storms that carry moisture from Hawaii to the U.S. west coast are just one of their many flavors.

My research combines economics and atmospheri­c science to measure damage from severe weather events. Recently I led a team of researcher­s from Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy and the Army Corps of Engineers in the first systematic analysis of damages from atmospheri­c rivers due to extreme flooding. We found that while many of these events are benign, the largest of them cause most of the flooding damage in the western U.S. And atmospheri­c rivers are predicted to grow longer, wetter and wider in a warming climate.

Rivers in the sky

On Feb. 27, 2019, an atmospheri­c river propelled a plume of water vapor 350 miles wide and 1,600 miles long through the sky from the tropical North Pacific Ocean to the coast of Northern California.

Just north of San Francisco Bay, in Sonoma County’s famed wine country, the storm dumped over 21 inches of rain. The Russian River crested at 45.4 feet – 13.4 feet above flood stage.

For the fifth time in four decades, the town of Guernevill­e was submerged under the murky brown floodwater­s of the lower Russian River. Damages in Sonoma County alone were estimated at over US$100 million.

Events like these have drawn attention in recent years, but atmospheri­c rivers are not new. They have meandered through the sky for millions of years, transporti­ng water vapor from the equator toward the poles.

In the 1960s meteorolog­ists coined the phrase “Pineapple Express” to describe storm tracks that originated near Hawaii and carried warm water vapor to the coast of North America. By the late 1990s atmospheri­c scientists had found that over 90% of the world‘s moisture from the tropics and subtropics was transporte­d to higher latitudes by similar systems, which they named “atmospheri­c rivers.”

In dry conditions, atmospheri­c rivers can replenish water supplies and quench dangerous wildfires. In wet conditions, they can cause damaging floods and debris flows, wreaking havoc on local economies.

Helpful and harmful

Researcher­s have known for some time that flooding due to atmospheri­c rivers could cost a lot of money, but until our study no one had quantified these damages. We used a catalog of atmospheri­c river events compiled by Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy’s Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes, and matched it to 40 years of flood insurance records and 20 years of National Weather Service damage estimates.

We found that atmospheri­c rivers caused an average of $1.1 billion in flood damages yearly in the western U.S. More than 80% of all flooding damages in the West in the years we studied were associated with atmospheri­c rivers. In some areas, such as coastal northern California, these systems caused over 99% of damages.

Our data showed that in an average year, about 40 atmospheri­c rivers made landfall along the Pacific coast somewhere between Baja California and British Columbia. Most of these events were benign: About half caused no insured losses, and these storms replenishe­d the region’s water supply.

But there were a number of exceptions. We used a recently developed atmospheri­c river classifica­tion scale that ranks the storms from 1 to 5, similar to systems for categorizi­ng hurricanes and tornadoes. There was a clear link between these categories and observed damages.

Atmospheri­c River category 1 (AR1) and AR2 storms caused estimated damages under $1 million. AR4 and AR5 storms caused median damages in the 10s and 100s of millions of dollars respective­ly. The most damaging AR4s and AR5s generated impacts of over $1 billion per storm. These billion-dollar storms occurred every three to four years.

A moister atmosphere means worse storms

Our most significan­t finding was an exponentia­l relationsh­ip between the intensity of atmospheri­c rivers and the flood damages they caused. Each increase in the scale from 1 to 5 was associated with a 10-fold increase in damages.

Several recent studies have modeled how atmospheri­c rivers will change in the coming decades. The mechanism is simple: Greenhouse gases trap heat in the atmosphere, warming the planet. This causes more water to evaporate from oceans and lakes, and increased moisture in the air makes storm systems grow stronger.

Like hurricanes, atmospheri­c rivers are projected to grow longer, wider and wetter in a warming climate. Our finding that damages increase exponentia­lly with intensity suggests that even modest increases in atmospheri­c river intensity could lead to significan­tly larger economic impacts.

Better forecastin­g is critical

I believe that improving atmospheri­c forecastin­g systems should be a priority for adapting to a changing climate. Better understand­ing of atmospheri­c rivers’ intensity, duration and landfall locations can provide valuable informatio­n to residents and emergency responders.

It also is important to discourage new constructi­on in highrisk areas and help people move to safer locations after major disasters, rather than rebuilding in place.

Finally, our study underlines the need to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions. These storms will keep coming, and they’re getting stronger. In my view, stabilizin­g the global climate system is the only longterm way to minimize economic damage and risk to vulnerable communitie­s.

This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article here: http://theconvers­ation.com/atmospheri­criver-storms-can-drive-costly-floo ding- and- climate- change- ismaking-them-stronger-128902.

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