Study Confirms Climate Change Intensified April Floods

Severe thunderstorms in April resulted in historic downpours and flooding across Arkansas, Kentucky, and other states, exacerbated by climate change.

This information comes from the World Weather Attributes Project, a consortium of scientists studying major weather events in relation to climate change.

From April 3 to April 6, heavy rainfall hit the southeastern U.S., leading to widespread flooding, flood warnings for over 70 million individuals, at least 15 fatalities, the sweeping away of vehicles, and train derailments.

By utilizing climate models alongside historical data, researchers examined storm systems across eight affected states and concluded that the current weather patterns were approximately 9% more intense due to global warming, with a 40% increased likelihood compared to a scenario without such warming.

Ben Clark, a researcher at Imperial College London, stated, “We conclude that the existing 1.3 degrees Celsius of warming has intensified the extreme rainfall leading to flooding in the region. A warmer atmosphere retains more moisture.”

The outcome was severe flooding in Frankfort, Kentucky, along with a rainy day in the Midwest on April 7th.
Leandro Lozada/AFP Getty Images file

The 1.3 degrees reference indicates how much warmer the planet has become in Celsius since humanity began releasing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere post-Industrial Revolution—a conversion of approximately 2.4 degrees Fahrenheit.

Clark noted that the probability estimates from the group are conservative. The researchers identified a unique weather configuration that contributed to the extreme rainfall.

Shell Winkley, a meteorologist with Climate Central, a nonprofit news organization involved in the report, explained that a low-pressure system interacting with a high-pressure ridge caused the thunderstorms to repeatedly affect the same areas in the Southeast and Midwest.

“This front was the route through which these storms moved, and there was also a trigger mechanism. The thunderstorms accumulated rain on already saturated soil,” Winkley noted. “This event is a fascinating intersection of weather and climate change.”

According to Winkley, the National Weather Service issued the third highest weather warning on April 2.

“By the end of the day, the National Weather Service had released 728 separate thunderstorm and tornado warnings from various offices, with numerous locations experiencing extreme rainfall between April 3 and April 6, with some areas seeing up to 16 inches,” Winkley explained.

After a significant storm in Portageville, Missouri on April 7th, vehicles navigate through flooded streets.
Scott Olson/Getty Images File

Upon reviewing historical rainfall from April, researchers indicated that similar storm systems are anticipated every century in the current warm climate.

Gerald Brotzge, a Kentucky climatologist and professor at the University of Kentucky Western University, initially approached such studies with skepticism, particularly those linking large-scale flooding to climate change without accounting for unique weather setups. However, he found this study credible.

Brotzge remarked, “It appears they conducted a thorough analysis. In this instance, a stagnant boundary allowed thunderstorms to constantly form in the same locality—an accurate observation.”

Brotzge noted that Kentucky has warmed by nearly 1.8 degrees Celsius (approximately 3.2 degrees Fahrenheit) over the last 130 years and has been experiencing increased rainfall.

“Our annual rainfall has risen by about 10%,” Brotzge stated. “Half of our ten wettest years have occurred since 2011, with 2011 being the wettest and 2018 as the second wettest.”

The World Weather Attribution is a team of scientists who quickly assess the influence of climate change on extreme weather events. Their methodology has undergone peer review, though some analyses are not immediately reviewed. Previous studies by the group on heatwaves, wildfires, and hurricanes have also faced academic scrutiny.

Source: www.nbcnews.com

April 2025’s Top Sci-Fi Pick: Sayaka Murata’s Intriguing New Novel

April is watching the release of a new space opera trilogy from Neil Usher

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When the sun comes out, it’s almost warm to read outside here in northeast London. So it’s time to take out the best new science fiction and find a protected place. Whether it’s aging or artificial intelligence, I love the way this genre continues to tackle today’s biggest issues. At the top of my mountain, Lucy Lapinska sees how robots deal with being freed from human governance, and while Nick Halcaway’s latest latest (at a huge price) is looking forward to the set in a world where you stop aging, it will also make you grow very big. And I would like to try Sayaka Murata’s vision of a strange and disturbing future, The world that disappears.

Our Science Fiction Hub is where you can read all the roundups, reviews and interviews with leading science fiction writers.

New novels with interesting sounds from bestselling authors Convenience store woman. Amane lives in a society where children are pregnant through artificial insemination and are raised by parents in a “clean” sexually unsexual marriage. When she and her husband heard about an experimental town where residents are randomly chosen to be artificially inseminated and children are raised collectively and anonymously, they decide to try and live there.

We loved Nick Halcaway’s first titanium noir novel here New ScientistThe world is set in which Megarich can take anti-aging medications, but grow them into a giant, Titanic-proportion. This latest in Halcaway, fresh from continuing his father’s John Le Carré legacy Carla’s Choicehe tells the story of a detective and Titan Cal investigating the murder of a young woman in a devastated holiday town.

This is the first in a new cosmic opera trilogy from Usher, following the story of Captain Bright, who is continuing to kill someone. The mysterious black diamonds left behind him by the “dark AI” keep him alive, but each attempt in his life creates a temporary anomaly. Bright is trying to reveal the true nature of dark diamonds…

For Jamie Pike, Fair Harbor is a city stuck in eternal winter. In the case of Esther Pike, it is stuck in a constant summer. In both versions, intense forces were controlled after the cataclysm and fell apart into a once united city. Jamie and Esther have found a way to communicate across a broken world, but can they solve the mystery that split Fair Harbor?

Highly praised by our sci-fi columnist Emily H. Wilson, this follows the story of Abigail, a robot set during the final days of humanity and embedded in the image of David’s late wife. However, the law is about to change, and soon Abigail can go where she likes and do what she wants. Recently, there have been many interesting and fictional take on robot ethics and freedom, and I am keen to read this “robot liberation” story.

Abigail is a robot about to be released in Lucy Lapinska’s novel

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For me, time travel counts as sci-fi, so I plan to relax in this time travel romance where student Joe dreams of a future where he becomes a famous writer. Meanwhile, ESI (People from the Future) heads out on a time-travel tour to witness the biggest moments in history, including Joe Falls for Diana, the subject of his famous love poem. However (of course!) Fate is disappointed by the arrival of ESI, and she and Joe begin to fall for each other instead…

In this speculative thriller, injections were invented to slow aging. Of course, the super-rich people are ruining things and getting upgrades that further expand human lives. As dangerous side effects of vaccines appear and planets are under threat, populations are skyrocketing…

This sounds like a fun thought experiment. Humanity has dipped to the height of the Handspan, not only has its world a place full of danger, but it has also brought richness. Giles awakens with his new body on a remote coastal road and sets out on a quest to find his loved one.

Ray Naylor is an incredible writer – I loved his previous novels, Sea mountainsand he wrote an article with great comments for me. New Scientist The government argues that speculative fiction should be used to predict the future. In this latest in a horrifying sound, the President of the Authoritarian Federation maintains a grip of power by downloading his mind to a series of new organisations, while Western Europe is plump for AI-driven prime ministers rather than human governance. However, the artificial mind is malfunctioning and disaster is looming.

This story, countering East London’s swamp, is a story that is left out of the corrupt government and is left out of the outsider, and a climate-stricken city goes back three centuries, moving from the next 100 years to save her present.

Arts and Sciences in Writing Science Fiction Courses: England

Explore the world of science fiction and learn how to create your own fascinating science fiction stories in this immersive weekend break. Hosted by New Scientist Comments and Culture Editor Alison Flood, along with author and former new scientist editor Emily H. Wilson.

Source: www.newscientist.com