Story Highlights
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- This week brings a preview of our special nationwide analysis and interactive, When It Rains, It Pours. Look for the full release next week, where you can explore the timeline, trends, and impacts of heavy precipitation at individual locations throughout the U.S.
- The analysis indicates heavy precipitation events are increasing nationwide, most dramatically in the Northeast. This is consistent with last year’s National Climate Assessment.
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CATS AND DOGS
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It’s only been two weeks since Oklahoma City was blasted with seven inches of rain in 24 hours—the third largest single-day rainfall total since record-keeping began in 1891. It’s less than two years since Philadelphia got a record 8.02 inches of rain in a day—7.35 inches of it in only four and a half hours.
Heavy precipitation occurrences are on the rise all over the U.S. That’s consistent with the fact that the U.S., like the world, is warming under a thickening blanket of greenhouse gases. For every 1°F of temperature increase, the atmosphere can hold 4% more moisture, which means there’s more available to fall as rain or snow.
In order to find out how heavy precipitation has changed in each state with these rising temperatures, we analyzed the heaviest 1% of precipitation events at more than 3,000 stations across the continental U.S.
The results are consistent with last year’s NCA: Individual states in the Northeast showed substantial statewide increases. States in the West and Southwest were less pronounced, and some states showed no clear trend at all. That’s not a surprise, though, as climate scientists expect different regions to see different trends. But on average across the U.S., the trend towards more heavy downpours matches what has also been observed globally.
COMING SOON...
Our special nationwide analysis and interactive When It Rains, It Pours will be released next week. Explore the timeline, trends, and impacts of heavy precipitation at locations across the U.S.
The analysis indicates heavy precipitation events are increasing nationwide, most dramatically in the Northeast. This is consistent with last year’s National Climate Assessment.
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