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    Home / Weather News /

    Climate change blamed for 50% more rain

09:00
2 October 2024

Helene's historic floods
Climate change blamed for 50% more rain

Hurricane Helene made landfall on Florida on September 26th, causing widespread destruction. Research shows climate change likely increased rainfall by 50%.

Hurricane Helene, a Category 4 storm, battered coastal cities like Tampa and Cedar Key in Florida, with fierce winds, heavy rain, and widespread destruction.

Flooding overwhelmed drainage systems and knocked out power for millions. As the storm moved north, it brought heavy rainfall to Georgia and the Carolinas.

As Helene reached the Appalachians, torrential rains triggered catastrophic flooding and landslides in Tennessee, the Carolinas, and Virginia.

Catastrophic damage in Cedar Key, Florida, after Hurricane Helene made landfall on Sep 26th 2024.  - © Jonathan Petramala

The flooding in these areas was unprecedented, with some regions seeing record-breaking rainfall of up to 15 inches (380 mm) in just 48 hours.

The first rapid attribution study suggest that climate change significantly amplified Helene's impact.

Using a Granger causal inference attribution methodology, researchers estimate that climate change caused over 50% more rainfall in some parts of Georgia and the Carolinas, and made this event 20 times more likely to happen.

Granger causal inference attribution

This is a statistical method used to determine whether one variable, like climate change, can help predict or explain another variable, such as extreme rainfall, by analysing patterns over time. 

For comparison, attribution studies for Hurricane Harvey, which also produced historic rainfall in Texas, found that human-induced climate change likely increased rainfall accumulations in the most affected areas of Houston by at least 18.8%.

Rapid attribution studies are scientific analyses conducted shortly after extreme weather events to assess how much human-caused climate change influenced the event's likelihood or severity.

These studies use climate models and observational data to quickly determine whether and by how much global warming contributed to extreme events.

Helene's destructive legacyread more
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