Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

State’s risk of ruinous deluge growing

UCLA researcher­s say warmer climate could fuel a ‘megaflood’ rivaling that of 1862.

- By Louis Sahagún

Even today, as California struggles with severe drought, global warming has doubled the likelihood that weather conditions will unleash a deluge as devastatin­g as the Great Flood of 1862, according to a new study from UCLA.

In that inundation 160 years ago, 30 consecutiv­e days of rain triggered monster flooding that roared across much of the state and changed the course of the Los Angeles River, relocating its mouth from Venice to Long Beach.

If a similar storm were to happen today, the study says, up to 10 million people would be displaced, major freeways such as Interstate­s 5 and 80 would be shut down for months, and population centers including Stockton, Fresno and parts of Los Angeles would be submerged — a $1-trillion disaster larger than any in world history.

It would also probably be “bigger in almost every respect” than what scientists have come to call the “ARKStorm scenario” of 1862, said climate scientist Daniel Swain, co-author of the study, published in the journal Science Advances.

“There’s more rain overall, more intense rainfall on an hourly basis and stronger wind,” he said.

The paper, published Friday, is the latest piece of re

search to describe the whiplash effects of a heating planet, where increasing temperatur­es allow the atmosphere to absorb and store more and more moisture. This atmospheri­c “thirstines­s” can result in either extreme drought and aridity or the massive release of water in the form of an atmospheri­c river.

The study used a combinatio­n of new high-resolution weather modeling and existing climate models to learn that the risk of a “megaflood” increases as global temperatur­e rises. It also simulated how a long series of storms fueled by atmospheri­c rivers over the course of a month in the projected climate of 20812100 would affect parts of California at the local level. Researcher­s found that some locations would get more than 100 inches of precipitat­ion.

On 10,000-foot peaks, which would still be somewhat below freezing despite global warming, “you get 20foot-plus snow accumulati­ons,” Swain said.

“But once you get down to South Lake Tahoe level and lower in elevation, it’s all rain.”

Today, because of historical climate change that began in earnest a century ago, a month-long extreme storm has a 2% likelihood of occurring in any given year, Swain said. Before climate change, it was a 1% likelihood.

Swain and co-author Xingying Huang project that end-of-the-century storms will generate 200% to 400% more runoff in the Sierra Nevada due to increased precipitat­ion and more precipitat­ion falling as rain, not snow.

The increased runoff could unleash massive landslides and debris flows, particular­ly in hilly and mountainou­s areas stripped of vegetation by wildfires.

“Whiplashin­g shifts” in extreme weather could also challenge the stability of California’s massive collection of aging dams and levees, exposing major cities to inundation.

The study also found that further increases in “megaflood” risk are likely with each additional degree of global warming this century.

The ARKStorm is also known as “the other Big One” after the nickname of an expected major earthquake along the San Andreas fault.

But unlike an earthquake, an ARKStorm event would result in a disaster zone stretched across thousands of square miles, complicati­ng emergency response efforts and triggering economic and supply chain blockages that would be felt globally.

The researcher­s are now working collaborat­ively with the California Department of Water Resources to develop maps pinpointin­g where flooding could be worst and preparedne­ss strategies to reduce potential losses of lives and property.

Some of their initial proposals, however, are all but certain to generate tensions between flood risk management plans and water conservati­on projects.

More frequent cycles of droughts and deluges fueled by atmospheri­c rivers — Pacific-based storms that are hundreds of miles wide — will present both problems and opportunit­ies for West Coast reservoir managers balancing mandates for water storage and flood control, said Alexander Gershunov, a climate scientist at the Scripps Institutio­n for Oceanograp­hy in San Diego who is not affiliated with the study.

That’s because, he said, “California will increasing­ly have to depend on potentiall­y hazardous atmospheri­c rivers and floodwater for water resource generation in a warming climate.”

Preparing for massive flooding, the UCLA study says, “could mean letting water out of reservoirs preemptive­ly, allowing water to inundate f lood plains and diverting water away from population centers.”

Earlier this week, Gov. Gavin Newsom called on state agencies to begin preparing for a hotter, drier future with strategies including expansion of water storage and water recycling capacity.

That’s because, he said, new data indicate that California will lose 10% of its water supply by 2040.

“Retaining as much water as we can is a good move,” Swain said, “except that might collide with the necessity to prepare for catastroph­ic flooding.”

Currently, people are focused on the risk of wildfires, plagues and earthquake­s, Swain said. “But catastroph­ic flooding is a risk that has been rising quietly but steadily in the background.”

“Eventually, it’s going to come back to bite us,” he said.

 ?? Bill Knight Los Angeles Times ?? A MORNING STORM dumped 2.32 inches of rain before noon on Feb. 19, 1958, forcing these stranded drivers to wade toward the sidewalks on Flower Street between 5th and 6th streets in downtown Los Angeles.
Bill Knight Los Angeles Times A MORNING STORM dumped 2.32 inches of rain before noon on Feb. 19, 1958, forcing these stranded drivers to wade toward the sidewalks on Flower Street between 5th and 6th streets in downtown Los Angeles.

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