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Increased Flood Exposure Due to Climate Change and Population Growth in the United States

Daniel L. Swain, Oliver Wing, Paul Bates, J. Done, Kris Johnson, D. Richard Cameron

2020Earth s Future286 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Precipitation extremes are increasing globally due to anthropogenic climate change. However, there remains uncertainty regarding impacts upon flood occurrence and subsequent population exposure. Here, we quantify changes in population exposure to flood hazard across the contiguous United States. We combine simulations from a climate model large ensemble and a high‐resolution hydrodynamic flood model—allowing us to directly assess changes across a wide range of extreme precipitation magnitudes and accumulation timescales. We report a mean increase in the 100‐year precipitation event of ~20% (magnitude) and >200% (frequency) in a high warming scenario, yielding a ~30–127% increase in population exposure. We further find a nonlinear increase for the most intense precipitation events—suggesting accelerating societal impacts from historically rare or unprecedented precipitation events in the 21st century.

Topics & Concepts

Flood mythPrecipitationClimate changeEnvironmental scienceClimatologyPopulationClimate modelClimate extremesRange (aeronautics)Atmospheric sciencesGeographyMeteorologyGeologyDemographyArchaeologySociologyComposite materialOceanographyMaterials scienceFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementClimate variability and modelsMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations
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