Hothouse
Rains for Kashmir: Worst Flooding in More Than 60 Years Puts 450
Villages Under Water
6
September, 2014
(The hurricane over land like signature that has become all-too-common during recent years as the Earth has continued to warm is plainly visible over the Kashmir region on September 5 of 2014. A multi-day flooding event that is now the worst for this Central Asian state in more than 60 years. Image source: LANCE-MODIS.)
On
Tuesday, a bank of thunderstorms fed by an atmospheric river of
moisture off the Arabian Sea exploded into a mountain of cloud over
Kashmir in Central Asia. The rains swept in and continued through
Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. A terrible flooding rain
that has now killed 160 people, forced the evacuation of 2,500
villages and buried more than 450 villages under waters rising high
enough to cover the hills.
River
flooding has been so intense that flood level gauges have simply been
buried, with towns and cities throughout the region facing
catastrophic damage. In Srinagar, a Kashmiri city of 1.2 million
souls, the situation today was dire. Union Minister Ragnath Singe,
visited the scene earlier today but had to cancel an aerial tour due
to ongoing severe weather keeping flights grounded:
“If
there is so much devastation in the city, I wonder what would be the
situation like in rural areas. I want to assure the people and the
government of Jammu and Kashmir that the central government stands
beside you in your hour of crisis and we extend all necessary help to
you,” Singe noted.
The
flood toll now includes more than 50 bridges, hundreds of kilometers
of roads, and the loss of numerous power plants and sub stations due
to inundation. Vast destruction of food crops is also underway,
though with the rains still ongoing it is impossible to provide a
full tally.
Minister
Singe, amid assurances of full-scale mobilization to aid disaster
victims and prevent loss of life has made a plea for 25,000 tents and
40,000 blankets to help provide shelter and care for the swelling
ranks of refugees from this ongoing catastrophe.
Conditions
in Context
Human-caused
climate change greatly amplifies the conditions that lead to more
intense rainfall and flooding events. For each 1 degree Celsius of
temperature increase, the hydrological cycle intensifies by 8
percent. So evaporation events and rainfall events grow ever more
intense as the world warms.
Though
storms, on aggregate, dump 8 percent more rain, and evaporation sucks
8 percent more moisture up from the lands and ground, the uneven
nature of weather results in a powerful amplification of extreme
events. So what you end up with is both far more powerful severe
storm systems and far more intense and rapidly asserting drought
conditions.
We
see these increasingly more dangerous events now at 0.85 C warming
above the 1880s average. And we have locked in about 1.9 C warming
this century and 3.8 C long-term warming due to the gasses we’ve
already emitted. But continued fossil fuel burning will make the
situation considerably worse.
Links:
Hat-tip
to Colorado Bob
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