A study published yesterday by Science Express finds a statistical link between warming weathers and extreme tropical downpours. 20 years of data from NASA satellites images found a rise in the heaviest tropical rains and is about double what computer simulations estimated.
Such changes in extreme rainfall are quite important in my view, as flash flooding is produced by the extreme rain events, said Anthony J. Broccoli, the director of the Center for Environmental Prediction at Rutgers University. In the U.S., flooding is a greater cause of death than lightning or tornadoes, and presumably poses similar risks elsewhere.
And it is worse for developing countries. Poor drainage can shut down a city and cause outbreaks of waterborne disease. And the World Bank estimates that heavy rains can stunt economic grown by 7%. And if countries can't handle extreme weather now, who's to say what will happen as the earth gets warmer.
takepart with ClimateCrisis.net
Related:
Inconvenient Truth of the Day
Tropical Warming Tied to Flooding Rains Topics
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