Climate
change and Colorado floods: The elephant in the room
ACE,
18
September, 2013
There
have been many words to describe the flooding in Colorado over the
past week: horrific, catastrophic, unprecedented and biblical are
some.
To
illustrate the scale of the disaster, some numbers:
The
flooding has
been classified as a 1000-year event, meaning
there was only a tenth of one percent probability (0.1%) that it
would happen in a given year. When an event this unusual and extreme
happens these days, one of the first questions people ask is:
“Was
it because of climate change?”
Here’s
my answer:
It’s
not a question of IF it was caused by climate change. It’s only a
question of HOW MUCH it was caused by climate change.
Climate change could have been a significant factor or only a small contributor, but there’s no way it wasn’t involved. With 40% more CO2 in the atmosphere than in pre-industrial times and 4% more water vapor in the atmosphere than 40 years ago, our world is fundamentally altered. There’s no control group to compare us to – we are all living this experiment.
A
helpful analogy is to say that climate change puts weather on
steroids – it makes the big events even bigger. And the attribution
is similar as well: If a baseball player is caught on steroids, we
don’t ask if it was the steroids that made him hit that particular
home run. But it does make all his statistics suspect. In the same
way, climate change makes a catastrophe like this suspect to
questioning.
There
are ways to go back in and run forensics on this event to determine
just how large a role climate change played. To do this, scientists
ask: What are the chances that this event could occur in a world
without 40% extra CO2 put in the atmosphere by people? But to do
this, scientists need computer models and time. Many of these
scientists work at one of the major climate modeling centers, the
National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), in Boulder and were
themselves affected by the flooding.
One
thing we do know is that, according to the January draft of the
National
Climate Assessment,
heavy downpours have already been increasing across the country and
are expected to increase both in intensity and frequency in the
future. So an extreme downpour like this fits with that picture.
Colorado,
however, is on the border between the desert Southwest, which is
expected get drier from climate change and the northern states that
are supposed to get wetter. Instead of making the state less impacted
by climate change, however, it’s been the opposite. Colorado has
been getting the worst of both worlds: drought and wildfires plus
flooding.
How?
More heat in the atmosphere means evaporation and drought, while at
the same time warm air holds more moisture and makes individual storm
events worse. This means that Colorado can
still be experiencing drought conditions,
but get hit by a major storm at the same time.
In
some ways, drought and wildfire damage can make a flood like this
worse, by removing trees whose roots soak up water and parching soil,
so that it’s too dry to absorb runoff. In this case, those factors
may have worsened the flooding, but the more than half a year’s
worth of rain that fell was plenty to do the damage on its own.
My
heart goes out to all those affected by this event, especially those
in Boulder and Estes Park, two places I have lived and still consider
a home. In the midst of this tragedy, let’s not forget about the
larger context of a heated-up world that this happened in.
Climate
change is that elephant in the room. If we’re going to deal with
him, we have to start by at least acknowledging that he’s there.
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