Showing posts with label extreme weather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label extreme weather. Show all posts

Aussies Feeling the Heat of Global Warming

Australia continues its warming trend and scientists know that this is due to anthropogenic climate change. Even though carbon emissions were flat for the third straight year, 2016 was still the hottest year on record. Sixteen of the 17 hottest years on record have occurred since the dawn of the new millennium. According to the World Meteorological Association, 2016 was 1.2 degrees Celsius warmer on average than temperatures for the preindustrial Earth. That is only .3 degrees Celsius below the upper threshold limit of 1.5-degree-Celsius. Extreme heat is not just a source of discomfort it can be deadly. The Australian Climate Council says that more people have been killed by heat in the last century than any other natural disaster.

Heat records fell like flies last year and this was certainly true in the Arctic. We know that the buildup of greenhouse gasses like carbon dioxide (CO2) cause global warming.  In May 2016, the Mauna Loa Observatory recorded 407.7 parts per million of CO2 in the atmosphere, the highest levels of atmospheric carbon ever recorded.

At the end of last year in Australia, there was record heat and drought. The heat continued into the new year with January breaking temperature records in Sydney and Brisbane. In January Sydney broke more records than any month since record taking began in 1858. The hot weather is continuing into the middle of February with some of the hottest temperatures of the summer in Sydney and Melbourne. Even Queensland saw temperatures exceeding 40 degree Celsius. The extreme heat has also contributed to 48 forest fires in New South Wales. Previous research has shown that bush fires are related to climate change.

Inside Climate News reports that heat waves have become more frequent in Australia. This is the view of Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick of Australia's Climate Change Research Center at the University of New South Wales:
"In Canberra, Australia's capital, the number of heat wave days has doubled in the past 60 years. In that same time, the beginning of the heatwave season in Sydney has advanced by three weeks, and in Melbourne, heatwaves are hotter," Perkins-Kirkpatrick said. "What's really interesting about this event is that all the physical mechanisms that drive heat waves are not in place."
What makes the Australian heat even more remarkable is that it is taking place in the absence of the kind of El Niño and hemispheric wind patterns that normally drive warmer weather. Scientists agree that climate change has a salient role to play. Forest and fire ecologist David Bowman said anthropogenic global warming is making the Earth and Australia hotter.
"In the last few years it has crossed a line—the anomalous weather has become consistently anomalous. I am confident we are seeing climate change play out in bush fires," Bowman said. "We have frittered away precious time debating abstractions or missing the point entirely. Numerous extreme events, seem unfortunately, the only things to spur broader social change."
Australia is far from the only place hit by extreme heat. In parts of South America, records are also being broken and massive wildfires have consumed hundreds of thousands of acres.

As reported by the Guardian, Bureau of Meteorology climatologist Agata Imielska said that climate change is driving up temperatures.

“One factor is the ongoing warming trend – we’ve warmed by a degree in the past century and it’s not just about averages, we see increases in these extreme temperatures as well,” Imielska said. “It doesn’t just go for land temperatures, it also goes for ocean temperatures. In 2016 we saw the warmest ocean temperatures on record.”
The Australian Bureau of Meteorology said the heat will continue right through into March. Going forward the situation will only get worse. As greenhouse gasses continue to build up in the atmosphere the hot temperatures will increase.

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The Death of the Great Barrier Reef
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New Report on Extreme Weather in Australia

Mother Nature Strikes Back: A Review of Extreme Weather in 2016

Extreme weather is a deadly corollary of climate change. A UN study found that between 1995 and 2015, 600,000 people died from natural disasters. Global warming is known to exacerbate the intensity of extreme weather events. We are already seeing clear evidence of climate change playing a role in a growing number of natural disasters. Thanks to advances in attribution science we can now see the role that climate change plays in driving a succession of increasingly severe extreme weather events.

According to a report from the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction, floods accounted for 30 percent of the world's top ten natural disasters in 2015. In 2015, three of the world's top 10 natural disasters by the number of fatalities were floods. In first place was heat waves, accounting for four of the top 10.

The warming trend and associated extreme weather events continued in 2016, which has replaced 2015 as the hottest year on record. Decades of hot data are the harbingers of a climate catastrophe. As published in Insurance Journal, here is a list of some of the extreme weather events we experienced in 2016
  • Flooding in China’s Yangtze Basin from May through August killed at least 475 people and caused $28 billion in losses.
  • A drought in India that started earlier in the year and stretched through June caused about $5 billion in damage.
  • Flooding in West Virginia and the mid-Atlantic in June killed 23 people and damaged more than 5,500 buildings.
  • Typhoon Nepartak hit the Philippines, Taiwan and China in July, killing 111 people and causing at least $1.5 billion in damage.
  • Flooding in northeast China in July killed 289 people and caused about $5 billion in damage.
  • Temperatures reached 129 degrees (54 degrees Celsius) in Kuwait and Iraq in July.
  • Flooding in Louisiana in August killed 13 people and caused around $15 billion in damage.
  • Flooding in Sudan and South Sudan in July and August killed 129 people and damaged more than 41,000 buildings.
  • A long heat wave coupled with high humidity afflicted the U.S. South and East. Savannah, Georgia, had 69 straight days when the temperature hit 90 or higher.
  • Typhoon Lionrock hit Japan, China and Korea in August and killed 77 people while damaging more than 20,000 buildings.
  • Spain set a record for the hottest September temperature recorded in Europe, with marks of 114 and 115 degrees.
  • Localities in the United States broke nearly 15,000 daily records for hot nighttime minimum temperatures from May into September.
Hurricane Matthew wreaked havoc in Cuba and the Bahamas and it killed almost one thousand people in Haiti. Although not as severe the effects of the Hurricane were felt in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina. What makes this hurricane noteworthy is that advances in attribution science are making it easier to see the role played by climate change.  The relationship between extreme weather and climate change was explored in a recent Scientific American article.

Perhaps the most disturbing thing about extreme weather in the US is the GOP's refusal to accept reality. Republicans ignored unprecedented heat and record breaking precipitation while boldly revealing policy platforms that will exacerbate the situation. The GOP's love of fossil fuels and disdain for climate action is equaled only by their hatred for science.

In the span of six months two once in 500 year storms have devastated Louisiana. Similar catastrophic flooding has gripped many pats of the world in 2016 including China, India, Macedonia, Pakistan and Sudan.

As reported by Damian Carrington in a Washington Post article, this warming trend has dire implications for extreme weather which costs lives, destroys crops and contributes to food insecurity.

"The extra heat from the powerful El Niño event has disappeared. The heat from global warming will continue...Because of climate change, the occurrence and impact of extreme events has risen...Once in a generation’ heatwaves and flooding are becoming more regular," Carrington said.

The WMO said human-induced global warming had contributed to at least half the extreme weather events studied in recent years, with the risk of extreme heat increasing by 10 times in some cases.

"It is almost as if mother nature is making a statement," said climate scientist Michael Mann, at Penn State University in the US.

According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, in 2016 extreme weather and climate events have adversely affected agriculture impacting the food security of more than 60 million people.

"Climate change is not like other issues that can be postponed from one year to the next,” he said. “The US and world are already behind; speed is of the essence because climate change and its impacts are coming sooner and with greater ferocity than anticipated."

The situation is dire as indicated by new research published at the end of 2016. The findings are from a Stanford University doctoral dissertation by Carolyn Snyder, a climate policy official at the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). As reported in Nature the research suggests the Earth is currently warmer than it has been in 100,000 years. The conclusion of the Snyder study suggests that current levels of fossil fuel use indicate the Earth is 'locked into' temperatures not Seen in 2 million years. The research suggests that we may see temperature rises of up to 9° Celsius.

As reported in an accompanying Nature article: "Even if the amount of atmospheric CO2 were to stabilize at current levels, the study suggests that average temperatures may increase by roughly 5° C over the next few millennia." If Trump delivers on his promise to extract and burn even more fossil fuels the situation could be even worse that predicted by the research.

"The kinds of extreme weather we have seen over the past year or so will be routine all too soon, but then even worse records will be set," Kevin Trenberth, one of the world’s leading climatologists, told Think Progress' Joe Romm.

Related
The Eye of the Storm: Hurricane Matthew, Attribution Science and Climate Change (Video)
Review of Extreme Weather in 2015
Growing Levels of GHGs are Warming the Planet and Contributing to Disasters
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Extreme Weather Makes a Convincing Case for Climate Change

Video - Remembering Haiyan and Working for Climate Justice


One year ago today, November 8, 2013, Super Typhoon Haiyan, one of the strongest storms ever to hit land, devastated the Philippines. Powerful winds and seven meter high storm surges killed as many as 7,300 people and forced a million families from their homes. A year later thousand of people are still homeless.

The chief climate negotiator from the Philippines Yeb Saño delivered a speech to the U.N. climate summit in Doha following the devastating Typhoon Bopha that killed some 1,100. "In Doha, we asked, 'If not us then who? If not now, then when? If not here, then where?' In the wake of Haiyan one year later in Warsaw," Saño said: "What my country is going through as a result of this extreme climate event is madness. The climate crisis is madness. We can stop this madness. Right here in Warsaw." 

Super storms like Typhoon Haiyan are the true face of the fossil fuel industry and unless we can rein in this rogue industry we will see even more record breaking storms. We know that fossil fuels are the leading cause of climate change and we must work to reduce our consumption and the emissions they cause.

The people of the Philippines are on the front lines of climate change and they are rising up and demanding climate justice. We must stand with them in their call for climate justice. They are at the forefront of a global movement calling for responsible governance and they need our support.  Be part of the global movement to stand together and say that we will not let storms like Haiyan become a way of life; we will stand together for climate action.

Last January 25th over 20,000 people came together in the Philippines for the Peoples Surge Rally. This call for climate justice is being reenacted on the anniversary of Haiyan. Hundred of people are staging a protest walk that will take them from Manilla to Tacloban City, the epicenter of the super-storm.

"We work with the local government and make them commit to implement disaster risk reduction management and climate change adaptation measures into making resilient communities. We walk for every Filipino whose lives and livelihood are at stake; for every country like the Philippines that has been damaged and continues to be damaged by climate change and its impacts.We walk to show world leaders that we refuse for Haiyan to be our way of life"

People Surge, an alliance of victims, organizations & individuals of the typhoon, has been mobilizing around the anniversary. They are preparing a two-day rally in Tacloban City for the anniversary wherein 20,000 participants who are survivors of calamities from Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao are expected.

With the aim of letting them know that we are with them, 350.org has organized a message campaign. Their fight is our fight. We are a global movement and we must stand together with those who are being devastated by climate change.

Click here to add your message.

You can help by donating to the Climate Relief fund which delivers 100 percent of the money raised will go to the Citizens Disaster Response Center (CDRC). Click here to donate.

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Graphics - East Coast Flooding: Miami and New York City

Graphics - East Coast Flooding: Miami and New York City




Source: PolicyMic

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The Costs of Climate Change Induced Flooding

A growing number of climate change related events are coalescing to contribute to very costly flooding.
______________________

The combination of thermal expansion, melting ice, and extreme precipitation are contributing to flooding which significantly increases the costs of climate change. Recent flooding in Central Europe accrued unprecedented costs and the UK in particular experienced some of the worst flooding in the Island nation's history. We have seen record setting downpours in Japan and recurrent widespread flooding in Australia. Last summer, we saw "Biblical flooding" in Colorado and most recently, the Balkans are suffering under a massive deluge. Even countries in the Middle East have been inundated by anomalous heavy precipitation in recent times.

In the past 140 years, sea levels have risen 7.7 inches and they are rising faster all the time. By the end of this century, scientists predict the seas will rise by as much as 7 feet. This will inundate cities around the world, including 1700 U.S. cities. We can expect that the homes and businesses of millions of Americans will be submerged. Americans. By 2100, up to 600 million people or five percent of the global population could be affected by coastal flooding.

There are more than five million cubic miles of ice on Earth and it is melting faster at an ever increasing pace. Our current average temperature of 58 Fahrenheit is steadily increasing and if left unchecked we are headed towards an average temperature that could exceed 80 degrees. Already Antarctic glaciers have passed points of no return as they lose 160 billion tons of ice per year. Other glaciers are also melting at surprisingly fast rates all around the world. As pointed out in the Third US National Climate Assessment, this includes those in BC and Alaska.

We cannot avoid the realization that the world is getting warmer and the more it warms, the more ice we will lose. If all the ice on land melted and drained into the sea it would raise sea levels 216 feet and effectively recreate new shorelines for our continents and inland seas.

Although it is hard to attribute any individual weather event to climate change, there is a growing body of evidence that is making it easier for scientists to say with confidence that climate change is behind changing precipitation patterns. Scientists, including those involved with the latest IPCC reports and the Third US National Climate Assessment concur that ice is melting, storm surges are increasing, as are extreme rates of precipitation. Even individual extreme precipitation events like that in the UK are being attributed to climate change.

When we think of flood damage, we commonly think of the impact on buildings. However, we need to be mindful that the costs extend beyond the immediate damage from water infiltration. We need to understand that floods kill people and destroy livelihoods. They deny people access to water, food, power and communications. In their aftermath, they commonly breed disease.

Heavy precipitation are also the cause landslides like the one in Washington state this year and flooding is behind mass migrations. For example, the recent floods in the Balkans led to over 2000 landslides and they drove some of the largest mass migrations since the war in the 1990s.

Flooding is already very expensive and the situation is expected to get far worse. The cost of the flooding in the Balkans alone is hundreds of millions of dollars. With a price tag of $15.2 billion, the summer floods in Germany and central Europe was the costliest event in 2013. This was even more costly than Hurricane Haiyan's $10 billion price tag.

Even before 2013, the EU had already spent $6.7 billion on flooding since the dawn of the new millennium. Scientists predict that flooding will double in the EU by 2050, which is expected to increase costs to $32.1 billion by 2050. Even this price tag is nothing compared to Hurricane Sandy, which on its own, cost the state of New York almost 50 billion.

A World Bank study indicates that the cost of flooding in 2005 was $6 billion. That number could skyrocket to at least 1 trillion annually by 2050. According to a new study, storm surges alone could increase costs from the current level of about $10-40 billion per year to up to $100,000 billion per year by the end of century. The World Bank analysis indicates that more than 40 percent of these costs could come from just four cities, three American and one Chinese (New Orleans, Miami and New York in the U.S. and Guangzhou in China).

Delays in engaging climate change are proving to be very costly. In the last two years alone delays in adopting mitigation and adaptation efforts have already cost us $8 trillion. The longer we wait the higher the price tag. A cost benefit analysis convincingly demonstrates the logic of paying now rather than later. Driven by a bottom line mentality, many large firms are engaging the risks and costs associated with climate change. A recent CDP report reveals that some of the world's biggest brands see the merits of taking action to deal with flooding and other corollaries of climate change.

A study from the Global Climate Forum (GCF) illustrates the merits of investing in adaptation to address risks from flooding. “If we ignore this problem, the consequences will be dramatic,” explained Jochen Hinkel from GCF and the study’s lead author.

We cannot afford to ignore the problem any longer. Unless we seriously engage mitigation and adaptation efforts, the costs of flooding will only get worse.

Source: Global Warming is Real

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Video - Southern California's Firenadoes are Spawned by Climate Change Induced Drought

Video - Southern California's Firenadoes are Spawned by Climate Change Induced Drought
In Southern California, climate change induced drought is fueling strong winds which are fanning wildfires and spawning what is known as "firenadoes." Also known as fire whirls these spiraling column shaped vortexes of flames look like something out of an apocalyptic vision.

The key components of firenadoes, are the related elements of drought and strong winds. In the case of the fires in Southern California, Santa Ana winds are funneling warm and dry air toward the coast, when high pressure moves over the deserts of inland California it reverses the typical west-to-east wind flow from the ocean. During a drought, these Santa Ana winds drastically drop humidity levels which cause hurricane force winds in the mountains.

Although firenadoes can occur with any sized fire, they are more commonly associated with large fires. They are created by cool air rushing to take the place of hot air which form vortexes. Firenadoes are more likely to occur where winds are forced to change directions, such as near a grove of trees. Firenadoes range in size from less than 1 foot to more than 500 feet in diameter.

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Climate Change Induced Wildfires Burn Out of Control in Southern California

One hundred and twenty five thousand people have been evacuated and businesses, schools and amusement parks have been shut down in Southern California due to the threat from wildfires. Many homes have been destroyed and millions of dollars of damage has been reported so far. The devastating spate of fires have also spawned what is being called "firenados", a surreal twister made of flame. The Fire Department is fighting the flames and has deployed water-bombers.

Local officials have indicated that there is a connection between California's wildfires and climate change. According to scientists, climate change has lengthening the fire season in California by several days per year. The Western wildfire season is now 78 days longer than it was in the mid-1980s. This year, due to worsening drought, the season effectively never stopped.

Wildfires in San Diego County, have forced the closure of schools, widespread evacuations and the devastation of approximately 10,000 acres which has prompted the governor to declare a state of emergency.

Triple digit temperatures are compounding the problem. The 102-degree reading in Oxnard, is the hottest temperature ever recorded in the month of May and just shy of the all time record for the area. Other areas in Southern California have also broken records.

The 400 acre Poinsettia Fire near Carlsbad has already claimed at least one victim and the Tomahawk fire that broke out on the Camp Pendleton Marine Base north of San Diego has destroyed more than 100 acres prompting evacuation of military housing and a naval weapons station.

On a brighter note crews have made substantial headway against the Bernardo Fire allowing people to go back to their homes. The Bernardo fire has burnt more than 1,500 acres. A total of 18,400 people were evacuated in and around San Marcos, north of San Diego. A total of 3 million people live in the area.

Firefighting efforts are being helped by less wind and cooler temperatures. However, prolonged draught and heat have made the area very vulnerable to forest fires.

Southern California has experienced some devastating fires in the past including the 2003 Cedar Fire scorched more than 437 square miles, nearly 3,000 buildings and killed 15 people. Another devastating wave of fires swept the San Diego region in 2007.

The wildfire situation is related to climate change induced drought that has taken hold across California. This does not bode well for the coming summer as the entire state is now suffering from “severe,” “extreme,” or “exceptional” drought conditions. This unprecedented wildfire risk is yet another painful and expensive corollary of our climate impacts.

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Visualizing Sea Level Rises from Climate Change

New websites are helping people to visualize sea level rises which is one of the most prominent features of global warming.

This issue is highlighted by recent research indicating that the melting glaciers in Antarctica have hit an irreversible tipping point.

Sea level rises have also been predicted by scientists all around the world including the most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, most comprehensive scientific summary of climate change to date.

There are two new websites that help people to visualize these rising sea levels. One of these sites is called, "World Under Water," it provides a virtually limitless assortment of graphic illustrations.

This website was created by environmental crowdfunding platform Carbon Story. It combines Google Street View images with wave graphics to demonstrate how rising sea levels might affect the world's most famous landmarks and cities. At the site you can see what cities like New York, Los Angeles,  Miami, Moscow, Rome, London, Paris, Dubai, and Vancouver would look like if they were under water.

You can also type any address in the world and take a look at what it would look like inundated by water. While the images provided are not scientifically derived, they do help to graphically illustrate what the world will look like as sea levels rise.

"World Under Water," goes beyond startling images of global flooding, it invites people to be part of the solution by helping them to calculate and offset their carbon footprints. 

Surging Seas, is another site which is derived from scientific data that estimates where seas will rise and by how much. This site is run by the nonprofit Climate Central. For certain cities, it even has data on population density, property value and social vulnerability of different neighborhoods.

Of course this is more than a consciousness raising exercise, these sites are meant to encourage action. Ultimately this means changing our current trajectory and specifically reducing man made greenhouse gas emissions. These sites show that how we will be effected by sea level rises if we continue with business as usual and this has a whole cascade of impacts from serious food shortages to widespread conflict.

To go to World Under Water click here.

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Video - Aftermath of the Gas Explosion at the Pensacola Jail in Florida


On April 30th, after days of torrential rain a gas explosion ripped through the Escambia County Central Booking Facility in Pensacola, Florida killing 2 people and injuring 183 others.

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Climate Change Induced Flooding may have Caused the Gas Explosion at the Pensacola Jail

Climate Change Induced Flooding may have Caused the Gas Explosion at the Pensacola Jail

Flooding may have caused the deadly natural gas explosion at the Escambia County Central Booking Facility in Pensacola, Florida. At this point 2 people are known to have been killed, 3 are missing and at least 180 others have been injured. The powerful blast which caused the building to partially collapse occurred just before midnight on April 30th.

Historic flooding has inundated the Pensacola area as well as much of the South-East. Pensacola picked up a record breaking 15.55 inches of rain on Tuesday. Over the course of a few days, the area received nearly 25 inches of rain. In one hour alone, 6 inches of rain fell in Pensacola.

Extreme rainfall like that which occurred in Pensacola, is increasingly common and it will become even more common as the Earth warms. Greenhouse gases cause the planet to warm, this causes more evaporation and thus more moisture in the atmosphere. The result is more heavy downpours and deluges.

As Kenneth Kunkel, a climate scientist with the National Climatic Data Center, explained to Climate Central, “There’s no place in the U.S. where the models aren’t, on average, showing an increase in extreme precipitation.” Other recent examples of torrential rains that may have beeen induced by climate change include the "Biblical" rains that fell in Colorado last year.

There are reports that the jail in Pensacola was flooded during the heavy rains but it is not known at this time whether the flooding was a factor in the explosion.

It is possible that the torrential rains caused a leak in the gas pipeline near the Escambia County jail. Last June flooding in Alberta caused a similar gas leak in the community of Turner Valley.

The combination of flooding and a natural gas explosion illustrates one of the many ways in which climate change can combine with fossil fuels to cause death and destruction.

It is widely known that American natural gas pipelines are leaking across much of the country. Recently such a leak led to a deadly gas explosion in Harlem.

Fossil fuels are not only the leading cause of climate change, they are also commonly a catalyst in deadly disasters.

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Heavy Rains Link Climate Change and Landslides

The recent deadly landslide in Washington state has led a number of publications to explore the possible influence of climate change. A landslide, defined as the downward movement of slope under the influence of gravity, can be triggered by a number of changes including weaknesses in composition or structure of the rock or soil and high precipitation. Rainfall, particularly heavy rainfall is the causal element that connects climate change to landslides and it is the focus of this article.

While the causal factors involved in landslides are complex, there is a strong body of research which supports the idea that climate change will increase the number of slides. The key factor connecting climate change to landslides is water. This linkage has been evinced in both geological and hydrological research.

As University of Washington geologist Dave Montgomery explained in an interview with Earthfix, “if the climate changes in a way that we get a lot more rainfall you would expect to see a lot more landslides.” The relationship between increased heavy rainfalls and climate change is widely documented. In 2007, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Working Group l reported that we can expect more extreme weather including heavy rains.
“More precipitation now falls as rain rather than snow in northern regions. Widespread increases in heavy precipitation events have been observed,” the IPCC report stated.
These observations have been reiterated in subsequent IPCC reports including the recently released AR5 Working Group ll. This report specifically pointed to “Increases in rainfall and wet weather…” in North America.

Less than three years ago, the Union of Concerned Scientists reviewed how climate change contributes to heavy rainfalls.

On Saturday March 22, a rural Washington state neighborhood 55 miles northeast of Seattle, was decimated by a landslide. A total of 50 buildings were destroyed and 29 bodies have been recovered, 19 others are still missing, some of whom may never be found. The mudslide on the outskirts of the town of Oso in Washington’s North Cascade Mountains measured about a square-mile and is as much as 70 feet deep in some places.

While it is difficult to attribute an individual landslide to climate change, we can say with a high degree of confidence that climate change is creating the right conditions for an increase in the number of slides we will see in the U.S.

According to a research paper titled, Effect of climate change on landslide behavior, “It is expected that shallow slips and debris flows will take place more frequently as a consequence of more extreme weather events.” The report also says, “glacial retreat and the melting of permafrost will cause more landslides, debris flows and rock falls to occur.”

The Pacific Northwest already gets a lot of rain and the levels of precipitation appear to be on the increase. National Weather Service meteorologist, Johnny Burg told the New York Times that this March was one of the wettest on record in the area.

An article in the Examiner said the landslide in Washington state happened because of too much precipitation. They pointed to the inordinate rainfall witnessed in the months preceding the event. Going all the way back to the preceding year the area was receiving unusual amounts of rain. The King 5 news said that Sea-Tac airport had three times the levels of rain usually recorded from March 2013 to March of the following year. Even the normally dry month of September was far wetter than usual.

In an April 2013, EarthFix article Jonathan Godt, a scientist with the US Geological Survey who has studied landslides in Western Washington said the culprit in landslides is adding water to gravity.
“You’ve got a steep slope and gravity wants to pull everything down and when water enters the soil it changes the stress of the soil,” Godt explains.
Carol Lee Roalkvam, the lead on environmental policy with the Washington State Department of Transport, who co-authored an assessment of climate change vulnerability, also subscribes to the view that we will see more landslides attributable to rainfall.

“We’re aware now of more upriver flooding than we’ve seen in the past,” she says. “More extreme rain events – the sudden and intense rain that we’ve been experiencing more frequently so a lot of the state routes are vulnerable to landslides today and the projections are that those will be worse.”

In an NBC News article Ermel Quevedo, principal engineer and former CEO of Landslide Technology explained it this way, “water puts so much pressure that the dirt starts slipping.”

As reported in a Think Progress article, more rainfall and warmer temperatures in the Pacific Northwest are expected to increase the number of landslides. The average annual precipitation in Washington has increased by about one third of an inch every ten years since the beginning of the 20th century. More intense rainfalls will further increase the likelihood of a landslide. Temperature increases in the Pacific Northwest may also play a role in increasing the likelihood of landslides. The University of Washington Climate Impacts Group has predicted that we will see earlier snowmelt and more precipitation in the form of rain rather than snow.

There may already be evidence for the beginning of a trend in the Pacific Northwest. As reviewed in the Earthfix article, in 2013, the corridor in Washington State running along the shores of Puget Sound between Seattle and Everett had one of its worse years ever for slides.

In March 2013, a massive landslide pushed 200,000 cubic yards of earth down the west side of Whidbey Island.

Another landslide occurred this March on the south shore of Shuswap Lake, north of Salmon Arm, B.C. The 150-feet long landslide took out power lines and blocked a road.

A chapter of a research report titled Climate Change Effects on Watershed Processes in British Columbia, makes the point convincingly, saying, “A changing climate…is expected to have many important effects on watershed processes that in turn will affect values such as…slope stability.”  It went on to predict, “an increased probability of droughts, floods, and landslides.”

The Pacific Northwest is hardly the only area in the US prone to landslides. In the San Francisco Bay area, storms have caused large numbers of slides in recent years. While landslides can occur in all 50 states, regions like the Appalachian Mountains, the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific Coastal Ranges have “severe landslide problems,” according to the United States Geological Survey (USGS). The agency lists California, Oregon, Washington, Alaska and Hawaii as especially prone.

While we cannot say for sure if inordinate rainfall caused the ground saturation which led to the landslide in Washington state. We do know with a high degree of certainty that climate change models predict more heavy rains, more glacial melthing and more precipitation falling as rain rather than snow.  The research indicates that this will very likely increase the frequency of landslides.

As explained in the British Columbia study, “Glaciers and permafrost will continue to melt, and landslide regimes will ultimately respond to all of these drivers.”

Landmass movements can be added to the long and growing lists of costs associated with climate change. The USGS says that landslides already cause several billion dollars in damages annually, and kill between 25 to 50 people each year. Going forward, we can expect to see more landslides due to climate change and this will increase the damage and the death toll.

Source: Global Warming is Real

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Heavy Rains in Egypt Followed by Sandstorms

Heavy rains that started on the weekend of March 7 and 8 caused deadly traffic accidents, flooding, school and road closures as well as other disruptions in many parts of Egypt. Some of the worst hit areas include the Sinai, the adjacent Gulf of Suez, and Upper Egypt. In remote areas the weekend storms damaged mud-brick homes in oasis towns in Egypt’s desert Wadi Al-Gedid governorate, bad weather also descended on the Nile Delta area.

Egyptian authorities declared an emergency alert on Sunday in the town St. Catherine in St Sinai. Residents panicked as the area was hit by a flood after heavy rain. It is too early to know the full extent of the extent of the damage.

A total of 16 people are known to have been killed so far in weather-related accidents and heavy rains. This is not the first time that extreme weather has caused deaths in Egypt this year. Four hikers died while climbing mountains close to St. Catherine when they were stranded by a freak snowstorm in February.

Fights were also disrupted. In one rain related incident the ceiling of the international arrivals hall of Hurghada Airport was damaged. This forced international flights to be transferred to the domestic travel terminal.

Electricity was cut off in South Sinai, Nuweiba as well as in hundreds of villages in Kafr El-Sheikh

After the weekends heavy rainfalls and hail, more rain and sandstorms are lashing parts of Egypt including areas around the Red Sea and Mediterranean coasts. The sandstorms impede visibility and may cause the closure of some ports.  They are expected to last until Thursday.

Unlike the snowstorm that struck the Middle East at the end of last year, these unstable weather patterns are a normal part of Egyptian weather for this time of year.

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Attribution Science and UK Storms and Flooding

While it is widely known that it is hard to assign individual extreme weather events to climate change, advances in attribution science including a new project will help us to zero in on the causes of specific storms. Improved attribution science including spatial resolution climate models will enable us to get a better grasp of how individual extreme weather events are linked to global warming.

Attribution studies have shown that anthropogenic climate change has significantly increased the chances of the catastrophic temperatures seen in Europe in 2003, which brought many thousands of heat-related deaths. Likewise, the record Australian temperatures of 2013, which brought devastating forest fires and the destruction of many homes, have become substantially more likely due to human influence on climate.

Dr Peter Stott, head of the Climate Monitoring and Attribution team at the UK Met Office acknowledges that studies have shown the human influence on climate, he also warns against over assigning such phenomenon. While he accepts that greenhouse gas emissions have been the dominant cause of global warming, he cautions that at present it is still hard to attribute individual extreme weather events to climate change. He goes on to say that unusual extremes have always happened and are sometimes due to natural variability and not climate change.

Stott suggests that natural variability may explain the recent run of wet summers in the UK dating back to 2007. He further explains that mis-attribution of extreme weather to climate change can easily lead to bad policy making.

It is clear that global warming has led to an increase in moisture in the atmosphere and roughly four percent more moisture over the oceans than in the 1970s. This has increased the likelihood of more intense rainfall. Attribution science`s study of wet and stormy weather in the UK has produced mixed results. The consecutive series of storms that have slammed into Britain this winter are due to an anomalous jet stream that has brought a sequence of intense storms on a more southerly track than usual.

While there is much that we do not know, a new European project may yield significant scientific dividends. The project is called EUCLEIA and it is led by the Met Office. It is developing a system that will provide reliable and user-relevant attribution assessments of floods, droughts, heatwaves, cold spells and storm surges in real time.

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