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Extreme precipitation events have always occurred, but are they changing?

big storm
Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Extreme weather and climate events causing extensive damage are a fact of the Canadian climate, and this year is no exception.

On June 13, a , the most expensive hailstorm in Canadian history. In early July, eastern Canada was subjected to both and .

As we cope with these events, questions invariably arise about what role climate change may have played. Has a particular extreme been made worse because of our changing climate? How will these extremes change in the future?

Water cycle accelerating

Many of these questions are linked with the hydrologic cycle—the evaporation of from the Earth's surface and its vegetation, the transport of water vapor in the atmosphere from one place to another and the ultimate return of the water to the surface as precipitation.

The water cycle speeds up when the climate warms. A warmer atmosphere holds more water vapor, creating the potential for more intense precipitation events. The evidence that has warmed the global climate over the past century is incontrovertible. Satellite data available since 1988 indicate that the , and that this is .

Individual extreme events are, however, influenced by many other factors. A storm can leave behind moisture at the surface that can re-evaporate and strengthen subsequent events.

The collision between a cold front and a lake breeze can lead to heavy precipitation. A delayed lake freeze-up during a warm winter can enhance lake-effect snowfall. Or a drought could limit local evapo-transpiration—evaporation from the land surface and transpiration from plants—eliminating the that comes from local moisture recycling and further intensifying hot, dry conditions.

Heavy rainfall

Many studies have examined precipitation-related change, . This is understandable because individual events, like a tornado or hail storm, are complex, and sparse ground observations and evolving techniques mean there aren't yet long-term records that allow scientists to reliably estimate trends.

In contrast, numerous rainfall records beginning in the 1950s or earlier exist across the globe. Statistical analyzes of data from these rain gages confirm that rainfall extremes have grown more intense and , in agreement with .

There are broad indications that these changes in rainfall extremes are due to on the climate and . Extreme one-day rainfall events that occurred about once every 20 years in the past are .

Even so, scientists still struggle to confidently say that a particular extreme rainfall event is the result of climate change. This is because there is naturally a large amount of variation in precipitation in one place, and the signal from climate change can get hidden within the natural noise.

Future extremes

Not all places have seen one-day rainfall extremes grow more intense over the past several decades, but that doesn't mean it won't happen in the future. The science indicates, with considerable confidence, that as the climate continues to warm, precipitation extremes will become substantially more intense in the , including Canada.

. For example, a recent study suggests that large hail by mid-century, but less likely in some other parts of Canada.

There is no doubt that human-induced greenhouse gas emissions have changed the . Nevertheless, the human imprint is often difficult to see in local meteorological observations. Despite that lack of direct "in your backyard" evidence, we should prepare for a future in which many precipitation-related extremes will become more intense.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: Extreme precipitation events have always occurred, but are they changing? (2020, September 7) retrieved 23 May 2025 from /news/2020-09-extreme-precipitation-events.html
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