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Global Warming Reports
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Executive Summary
Scientists expect that global
warming will cause a variety of changes to precipitation patterns in the United States.
Many areas will receive increased amounts of rain and snow over the course of a
year; some areas will receive less. But scientists expect that, all across the
country, the rainstorms and snowstorms that do occur will be more intense –
increasing the risk of flooding and other impacts.
In this report, we evaluate trends
in the frequency of storms with extreme levels of rainfall or snowfall across
the contiguous United States
over the last 60 years. We analyze daily precipitation records spanning from
1948 through 2006 at more than 3,000 weather stations in 48 states. We then
examine patterns in the timing of heavy precipitation relative to the local
climate at each weather station.
We find that storms with extreme
amounts of rain or snowfall are happening more often across most of America,
consistent with the predicted impact of global warming.
Scientists expect global warming to increase the frequency of
heavy precipitation.
-
As
the earth warms, temperate regions of North America
will face a growing risk of storms with extreme levels of rain or snowfall.
- Global
warming increases the intensity of precipitation in two key ways. First, by
increasing the temperature of the land and the oceans, global warming causes
water to evaporate faster. Second, by increasing air temperature, global
warming enables the atmosphere to hold more water vapor. These factors combine
to make clouds richer with moisture, making heavy downpours or snowstorms more
likely.
- The
consequences of increasingly intense rainstorms may include flooding, crop
damage, pollution of waterways with runoff, erosion, and other environmental
and economic damage. During the 20th century, floods caused more property
damage and loss of life than any other natural disaster in the United States.
An increase
in the number of downpours does not necessarily mean more water will be
available.
- Scientists
expect that extreme downpours will punctuate longer periods of relative
dryness, increasing the risk of drought. In the Southwest, for example, total
annual precipitation is projected to decline – amplifying the impact of periods
of little rainfall between heavy storms.
- Even
in the rest of the country, where total annual precipitation is expected to
increase, more of that precipitation will fall in heavy rainstorms or
snowstorms, paradoxically increasing the potential for drought.
- As
temperatures rise, precipitation will become increasingly likely to fall as
rain rather than snow, increasing runoff and likely reducing water supplies in
areas dependent on snowpack.
Weather
records show that storms with extreme precipitation have become more frequent
over the last 60 years.
- Consistent
with the predicted impacts of global warming, we found that storms with extreme
precipitation have increased in frequency by 24 percent across the continental United States
since 1948. (According to a statistical analysis of the data, with 95 percent
confidence, the increase has been between 22 and 26 percent.)
New England and the Mid-Atlantic experienced the largest increase in extreme
precipitation frequency.
- New England and the Mid-Atlantic saw storms with extreme precipitation
levels increase in frequency by 61 percent and 42 percent, respectively.
- At
the state level, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Massachusetts,
Vermont, New York
and Louisiana
all saw extreme precipitation events increase in frequency by more than 50
percent.
- In
the contiguous United States,
40 states experienced a statistically significant trend toward increasingly
frequent storms with extreme precipitation. Only one state (Oregon) showed a statistically significant
decline in frequency of storms with extreme precipitation.
Climate
divisions covering more than half of the land area of the United States
show a statistically significant trend toward more frequent storms with extreme
precipitation.
- We
also looked at the trend in frequency of storms with extreme precipitation
within climate divisions, which are boundaries used by climatologists since
the 1950s to aggregate weather observations. Figure ES-2 presents these trends,
showing that the largest increases occurred across New
England, New York, much of the
Great Lakes area, the upper Midwest, plus Louisiana,
New Mexico, northern Washington
and southern California.
- Climate
regions covering more than half of the surface area of the contiguous United States
show a statistically significant increase in the frequency of storms with
extreme precipitation levels.
-
In
contrast, the data show statistically significant decreases in extreme
precipitation frequency for climate regions covering only 4 percent of the area
of the United States.
(Oregon, the northwestern corner of North Dakota, central Arkansas,
the southern tip of Lake Michigan, and northern Florida.)
These
findings are consistent with previous studies of extreme precipitation
patterns, both in the United
States and across the globe. For example:
- Scientists
have observed warmer weather, higher atmospheric moisture content, increased
formation of storm clouds, and an increase in thunderstorm activity over the
contiguous United States
in recent decades.
- In
1999, researchers at the Illinois State Water Survey and the National Climatic
Data Center (NCDC) found that storms with extreme precipitation became more
frequent by about 3 percent per decade from 1931 to 1996. Our findings are consistent
with this result.
-
In
2004, scientists at NCDC concluded that most of the observed increase in
storms with heavy and very heavy precipitation levels since the early 1900s had
occurred in the last three decades. In other words, they found that the change
in extreme precipitation frequency is unusual and relatively recent.
-
Moreover,
NCDC found that extremely heavy storms are increasing in frequency more
rapidly than very heavy storms – which in turn are increasing in frequency more
rapidly than heavy storms.
The severity
of the trend toward more intense downpours in the future depends upon our
emissions of the pollution that drives global warming.
-
Climate models predict that the trend toward
increasingly frequent storms with heavy precipitation will intensify in the
future. Some amount of change is inevitable given the global warming emissions
humans have already created. However, we still have the ability to prevent the
worst-case scenarios.
- By halting the increase in total U.S. global
warming emissions now and reducing emissions by at least 80 percent by
mid-century, we can limit the increase in major storm frequency — and thus
reduce future risks of flooding and other serious consequences of extreme
rainstorms.
To address
global warming, America
should limit emissions of global warming pollution, while improving energy
efficiency and increasing the use of renewable energy.
- To
protect future generations, the United States
should adopt a mandatory cap on global warming pollution that reduces total U.S. emissions
by at least 15 to 20 percent by 2020 and by at least 80 percent by 2050.
-
If
policymakers choose a cap-and-trade program to achieve this goal, it should
include auctioning 100 percent of emission allowances, rather than giving
allowances away to polluters. By auctioning allowances, we can reduce the cost
of achieving emission reduction goals, making it more likely that America will
succeed.
- The United States
should also adopt complementary policies to improve energy efficiency and
increase the use of clean, renewable energy.
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