There's something about the mid-to-late summer that tends to bring extreme weather events of enormous magnitude. There was the 2010 Russian heat wave and Watch Believer OnlinePakistan floods, which together killed tens of thousands, and the 2003 European heat wave. Of course, this year, there's the unprecedented Texas deluge from Hurricane Harvey.
While Harvey has garnered most of the attention in the U.S. -- and rightly so, given the extraordinary scope and scale of the disaster, a wider view of the world reveals that Houston is not alone. Flooding disasters have been taking place in large cities and rural towns across Asia and Africa.
SEE ALSO: Before and after photos: Harvey's devastating floods are clearly visible from spaceThese floods dwarf Texas' woes when it comes to the number of lives affected, and they also offer a foreboding glimpse into our future climate. Extreme events, including precipitation extremes, are only expected to worsen in coming decades, so we'd better start building communities that are resilient enough to handle the onslaught of water.
These floods carry with them a message for humanity that we are increasingly pushing the climate and population centers beyond their limits, and suffering blowback as a result. One of the more well-established findings from climate change attribution studies is that human-caused global warming is raising the risk of heavy rainfall events across much of the world.
Shane Hubbard, a meteorology researcher at the University of Wisconsin studying Harvey's floods, says there has been an observed shift in how places are getting their rain. Instead of coming in many lighter rainfall events, we're getting more rain in short, intense bursts, he said.
“We’re getting our rainfall quicker and in a fewer set of storms,” Hubbard said.
When these heavy rains fall on sprawling, low-lying cities, such as Houston, or in densely populated developing countries such as India, death and destruction can result.
Hubbard's work shows that Harvey was the most extreme rainstorm on record in the U.S. in terms of its magnitude and scope. He determined that an area just larger than the state of West Virginia received at least 20 inches of rain, and an area about the size of Massachusetts and Rhode Island combined was inundated with 30 inches or more of rain.
“It’s not even close, it’s not even in the same ballpark," as other rainfall events, Hubbard said of Harvey.
"This is an event that’s way on the end of the spectrum. We’re on the end of the curve,” he said, calling it a 1,000-year rainstorm, meaning it has about a 0.1 percent chance of occurring in any given year.
Beyond Houston, one need not scan headlines very far to come across stories of deadly flooding elsewhere. The worst monsoon rains in years slammed parts of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nepal during the past 2 weeks, killing at least 1,200 and affecting the lives of more than 40 million, according to news reports.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Severe flooding brought the city of Mumbai to a standstill for days in late August, killing more than a dozen. As is the case in Houston, development patterns, such as the paving over of mangrove swamps and other naturally-occurring drainage systems, worsened the flooding there.
In Nepal, thousands have lost their homes and dozens have died in monsoon-related rains. Elephants were enlisted to help rescue people. And in Bangladesh, a low-lying, vulnerable nation under assault from global warming-related sea level rise, about one-third of the land is under water from intense monsoon rainfall, according to the New York Times.
Then there's the flooding in Niger, a developing country that typically sees heavy rains at this time of year. This rainy season has been unusually destructive, with more than 40 killed and thousands displaced.
These floods cap off another extreme summer.
It's not a coincidence that these are occurring at a time when planet-warming greenhouse gases in the atmosphere are at an all-time high during human history, and when we're settling in increasingly crowded megacities with inadequate infrastructure.
While the flood events in Houston, Asia, and Africa during the past few weeks cannot be directly connected, they all send the same blaring message: We're slipping blindly into the era of climate change consequences. The sooner we realize that, the better.
Woman finds beautiful kebab shop photoshoot on her phone after night outMan eats all the food in 'Lord of the Rings' in tribute to his late father'Black Panther' had the most presale tickets of any nonHasbro's Hero Vision Iron Man mask is a fun way to get kids into ARVictor Oladipo dunks in 'Black Panther' mask from Chadwick BosemanMinnesota man teams up with friend in India to create an earth sandwichJeffrey Tambor fired from 'Transparent' after sexual harassment allegationsJennifer Lawrence's 'Red Sparrow': Movie review roundupThis video of the 'Outlander' actors' first chemistry test has us swooningRedditors threaten Coinbase with violenceBlack Panther's Wakanda reveals the limits on the black imaginationThis deeply terrifying mascot is here for a very good reasonUltrathin display sticks to your skin to show your current vital signsEverything you need to know about Black Panther before 'Black Panther'Google tweaks image search in attempt to curb copyright infringementWatch Lupita Nyong'o and Letitia Wright freestyle a 'Black Panther' inspired rapHasbro's Hero Vision Iron Man mask is a fun way to get kids into ARApple employees are walking into the 'spaceship campus' glass wallsThis video of the 'Outlander' actors' first chemistry test has us swooningThe polar vortex just split in two. Get ready for some wild weather Explained: Albert Einstein's role in 'Oppenheimer' Review: 'The Venture Bros.: Radiant Is the Blood of the Baboon Heart' Lisbeth Salander Lives Again, and Other News by Sadie Stein 'They Cloned Tyrone' ending explained 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for July 23 Twitter implements DM limit for unverified users The Black Album by Rowan Ricardo Phillips Reddit tricks an AI into writing about a fake World of Warcraft character Smut by Sadie Stein What happened to H.E.L.P.eR.? 'Venture Bros,' creators weigh in What's new to streaming and theaters this week: Barbenheimer to 'They Cloned Tyrone' Holidays, via The Paris Review by Sadie Stein Underthings, and Other News by Sadie Stein Stephen King Freaks Out Twitter, and Other News by Sadie Stein 'Barbie' robbed us of another iconic Ryan Gosling Ken moment What We’re Loving: Racetrack Murals, Lovers, A Child’s Christmas in Wales by Sadie Stein Troy to Ithaca by Sadie Stein 'Oppenheimer' features 'sex as only Nolan could stage it.' What does that mean? For Seamus by Belinda McKeon This Is Growing Up by Justin Alvarez
1.8227s , 10134.0546875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Believer Online】,Evergreen Information Network