Texarkana Gazette

Study: 100-year rain events to strike Texas more frequently

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DALLAS—Decades of additional weather data have led federal officials to reconsider rainfall totals in Texas that define 100-year weather events and caution that extreme rainstorms will strike the state more frequently.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion on Thursday released a study finding that in the Houston area, for instance, 100-year estimates increased from 13 inches to 18 inches for a 24-hour period. Rainfall previously classified as 100year events are now more frequent 25-year events.

A 100-year storm is one that, on average, occurs every 100 years, or has a 1 percent chance of happening in any given year.

In the Austin region, 100year rainfall amounts for 24 hours increased as much as 3 inches up to 13 inches. The 3-inch increase was the same for the area just north of Corpus Christi, a portion of West Texas that includes the border county of Val Verde, and elsewhere.

“Current standards used for infrastruc­ture design and floodplain regulation­s will possibly be revised based on the new values,” said Mark Glaudemans with NOAA’s Office of Water Prediction. “Officials in locations that have seen significan­t increases are already assessing the potential impacts of adopting the new estimates.”

Earlier rainfall estimates provided by NOAA were based on data that in some cases are more than 50 years old.

In a January report, the National Hurricane Center determined that the Houston metro area last year experience­d a flood brought by Hurricane Harvey that was a greater than a once-in-1,000 year event, the highest level that’s calculated.

Until Harvey, the record for rainfall from a hurricane or tropical storm in the Lower 48 states was 48 inches in 1978, and 52 inches in Hawaii in 1950.

With Harvey, seven places beat out the 52-inch record and 18 places beat the 48-inch mark. The top two—Nederland and Groves, Texas—both were more than 60.5 inches (154 centimeter­s).

The NOAA findings released Thursday can have wide-ranging implicatio­ns. NOAA rainfall values guide state and federal regulation­s that then dictate how infrastruc­ture design and developmen­t is done. They also determine flood risks and are used in the developmen­t of floodplain­s.

Harris County commission­ers on Tuesday earmarked $14.5 million for updated flood plain maps in the wake of Harvey. The maps rely on rainfall data to help Houston-area regulators determine where homes can be built, insurance costs and locations for flood-control projects. It wasn’t clear Thursday how the NOAA report may affect the revision of those maps. A spokeswoma­n for the Harris County Flood Control District did not return a message seeking comment.

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