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Honored Contributor
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Re: Prayers for Those in NY, NJ, & PA

[ Edited ]

They said 25 people died in the floods,6 missing ,just all from the flood.Heart

When you lose some one you L~O~V~E, that Memory of them, becomes a TREASURE.
Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,554
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Re: Prayers for Those in NY, NJ, & PA

 

An article in today's NY Times explained how rainstorms now produce heavier rainfall in short amounts of time.  It's worth a read.  It is not just about New York, this was just one instance.

 

New Yorkers Got Record Rain, and a Warning: Storms Are Packing More Punch

By Brad Plumer
Sept. 2, 2021
The torrential rains on Wednesday that deluged New York and New Jersey, killing more than three dozen, carried a stark warning about climate change: As the planet gets hotter, heavy rainstorms are dumping more water than ever before, threatening to devastate unprepared cities.

Climate scientists have long predicted that global warming would make certain parts of the world wetter overall, in part because a warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture. But simply looking at global averages can obscure a more important reality: The heaviest rainstorms are now more intense and can produce vastly more rainfall in short periods of time. Those extreme events are what can drive catastrophic flooding.

“Storm intensity is increasing much faster than the average change in precipitation,” said Aiguo Dai, a professor of atmospheric science at the University at Albany, SUNY. “And it’s the intensity that really matters, because that’s what we design our infrastructure to handle.”
As the remnants of Hurricane Ida swept over New York City, Central Park recorded 3.15 inches of rain in a single hour on Wednesday night, smashing the previous one-hour record of 1.94 inches set on Aug. 21 during Tropical Storm Henri. The sudden burst of rain paralyzed the city, with cascades of water pouring into subway stations and shutting down much of the system for hours.

Across the continental United States, the heaviest downpours have become more frequent and severe in recent decades, according to the federal government’s National Climate Assessment. In the Northeast, the strongest 1 percent of storms now produce 55 percent more rainfall than they did in the middle of the 20th century.

“There’s a lot of fluctuation year to year, but over a longer period of time, the trend is becoming increasingly evident,” Dr. Dai said. “This is exactly what both theory and climate models predicted.”

Other parts of the world are also struggling with increasingly vicious downpours. In July, unusually heavy rains in Germany and Belgium caused rivers to burst their banks, washing away buildings and killing more than 220 people. That same month, days of torrential rain in Zhengzhou, China, submerged the city’s subway system and caused at least 300 deaths in the region.

While scientists cannot always predict exactly when and where such rainstorms will occur, they understand how global warming is making them stronger. As temperatures rise, more water evaporates into the air from the oceans and land. And, for every 1 degree Celsius of global warming, the atmosphere can hold roughly 7 percent more water vapor.
That means when a rainstorm does eventually form, there is more water that can fall to the ground, sometimes within a very short period. Recent studies have detected an increase in hourly rainfall extremes in parts of the United States, Europe, Australia and Asia.

And if the planet keeps getting hotter, the threat of more intense rainfall will grow. Earth has already warmed roughly 1.1 degrees Celsius since preindustrial times, driven by greenhouse gas emissions from the burning of fossil fuels and deforestation. Without swift action to reduce those emissions, a recent report from the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned, the planet could warm twice that amount or more.

That report explored the consequences for heavy rain events. Consider a severe rainstorm that, in the past, might have occurred just once a decade, on average. Today, that same storm is now 30 percent more likely to occur and produce 6.7 percent more rainfall, on average. If total global warming reaches 2 degrees Celsius, that same storm will produce 14 percent more rainfall. The report predicted that heavy precipitation and flooding would very likely become more frequent across North America, Europe, Africa and Asia as temperatures rise.

More rain can often be a blessing for drinking water supplies and agriculture, as the American West, which is currently grappling with a record drought, knows well. But too much of it coming down all at once can also have devastating impacts.

In Tennessee last month, intense thunderstorms caused rivers and creeks to quickly overflow, flooding homes and killing at least 22 people. In California this year, portions of Highway 1 collapsed into the Pacific Ocean after heavy rains unleashed torrents of mud and debris. In the Midwest in 2019, unrelenting downpours destroyed crops, stripped away topsoil and forced farmers to delay their plantings.

Whether a heavy rainstorm leads to destructive flooding, however, depends on a combination of factors: the amount of rainfall, the way that water flows and collects on the landscape, and how all that water is managed. Over time, studies have found, the United States and other countries have managed to reduce their vulnerability to many types of dangerous flooding by building dams, levees and other protective measures.

Still, plenty of risks remain. Cities such as New York are often more vulnerable to sudden downpours because so much of their land area is paved over with impervious surfaces like asphalt, which means that runoff is channeled into streets and sewers rather than being absorbed into the landscape. In Houston, researchers have found that the transformation of open land into paved parking lots and housing developments helped worsen flooding after Hurricane Harvey in 2017.

New York’s subway system, built a century ago, was also not designed to handle more extreme rainfall fueled by climate change. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority has invested $2.6 billion in resiliency projects since Hurricane Sandy inundated the city’s subways in 2012, including fortifying 3,500 subway vents, staircases and elevator shafts against flooding. Still, this week’s flash floods showed that the system remains vulnerable.

And as heavy rainfall increases, experts say, more will need to be done. That could include adding more green space in cities to absorb excess runoff, as well as redesigning sewer systems, roads and public transit networks to cope with heavier precipitation. It also includes updating flood-risk maps to account for climate change, so that people have a clearer sense of where it’s risky to build and where they should buy insurance against flooding.

“Pretty much all the infrastructure we’ve built today was designed to deal with historical weather conditions, and that’s no longer enough,” said Jennifer Jacobs, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of New Hampshire. “It’s tough in places like New York City, because there’s just not much room for the water to go, but we need to think more creatively about drainage and how we design our systems for higher levels of precipitation.”
Brad Plumer is a climate reporter specializing in policy and technology efforts to cut carbon dioxide emissions. At The Times, he has also covered international climate talks and the changing energy landscape in the United States. @bradplumer

A version of this article appears in print on Sept. 3, 2021, Section A, Page 15 of the New York edition with the headline: Devastating Night, and a Warning: Big Storms Are Packing a More Powerful Punch. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

Honored Contributor
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Re: Prayers for Those in NY, NJ, & PA

Thoughts and prayers to all impacted in TN, LA, and NY and all along the cost....

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Re: Prayers for Those in NY, NJ, & PA

There's something to be said about too much cement in cities. 

 

Not enough soil and open space to allow water to absorb into the earth. 

 

(What I've been saying about cement and cities for many, many years.  Maybe even from the seventies.

 

Doesn't the earth need to 'breathe'? )

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Re: Prayers for Those in NY, NJ, & PA

For those of you interested, Google "Brown ocean Hurricane Ida".  You can read articles discussing how/why Ida maintained her fury even over land. 

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Re: Prayers for Those in NY, NJ, & PA


@ROMARY wrote:

There's something to be said about too much cement in cities. 

 

Not enough soil and open space to allow water to absorb into the earth. 

 

(What I've been saying about cement and cities for many, many years.  Maybe even from the seventies.

 

Doesn't the earth need to 'breathe'? )


 

@ROMARY 

 

I so agree that our beloved cities need green spaces!  New York City has the most green space of any city in North America, with 27 percent public green space followed by Austin, Texas (15 percent), Montreal (14.8), San Francisco (13.7) and Toronto (12.7 percent).

 

But New York City is always looking to expand its green spaces, and is in the middle of executing a big initiative to expand our green infrastructure with rain gardens.

 

I see them everywhere, but had no idea how important they are to the City and the environment until I saw a piece in our local news a month or so ago.

 

The news story stated that rain gardens improve the environment by allowing rain to be naturally absorbed into the ground instead of flowing into the sewer system, thereby reducing pollution in the water ways.  They also help reduce the temperature and improve air quality, and provide a habitat for local pollinators. The City has built thousands of rain gardens across New York City in recent years, and has plans to install more, which we obviously need.  The plans wil probably need to be adjusted to our new realities.

 

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