Study Highlights Growing Importance Of Multi-Day Storms In Future U.S. Flood Risk
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https://news.okstate.edu/articles/engineering-architecture-technology/2026/study-highlights-growing-importance-of-multi-day-storms-in-future-u.s.-flood-risk <-- shared technical article
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https://doi.org/10.1088/2752-5295/ae4f14 <-- shared paper
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“Extreme rainfall is projected to intensify as the climate warms, yet whether the greatest increases will occur in multi-day or single-day events remains uncertain. This knowledge gap is particularly pressing given recent catastrophic floods triggered by multi-day rainfall events, prompting the question of whether multi-day events could, in fact, intensify more than their daily counterparts, and by how much. This study addresses this question using an ensemble of 34 downscaled Earth System Models under two Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5), focusing on changes in extreme rainfall by the end of the century across ten regions of the contiguous United States. [Their] statistical framework evaluates model agreement, ensemble-mean changes, and the significance of these changes for both daily and multi-day rainfall extremes. Results show that extreme rainfall amounts are expected to increase for most regions and durations. The degree of intensification, however, depends strongly on event rarity and regional climate characteristics. Notably, in the U.S. western Gulf Coast region, very rare multi-day events (e.g., 500 year return period) are projected to intensify more than their daily counterparts, a phenomenon that could be explained by increased stalling of tropical cyclones, which can prolong heavy rainfall over multiple days. These results challenge the assumption that daily extremes dominate future risk and highlight the need to consider event duration when updating flood-hazard maps, design standards, and adaptation planning…”
#Flooding #FloodRisk #FloodInsurance #FloodAwareness #Explore #FloodPreparedness #FlashFlooding #ClimateResilience #climatechange #extremeweather #DisasterPreparedness #StormwaterManagement #FloodSafety #CommunityResilience #risk #hazard #model #modeling #floodrisk #multiday #rainfall #precipitation #storm #water #hydrology #hydrography #planning #policy #regulations #climatemodel #CONUS #USA #publicsafety #cost #economics #damage #loss #infrastructure #spatiotemporal #spatialanalysis #earthsystemmodels #forecasting #meteorology #designstandards #floodmapping #mitigation #flood
Flood risk prompts evacuation alert for 2 dozen properties in southwest B.C.
Residents of several properties on B.C.'s South Coast are being told to prepare to leave at a moment's notice as data shows an increased risk of flooding.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/evacuation-alert-flood-risk-gates-lake-poole-creek-9.7227606?cmp=rss
Flood risk eases in B.C.'s East Kootenay, but officials say water levels remain high
Flood risks have eased in the East Kootenay after a weekend of rain and rapid snowmelt, but officials say waterways remain high and unpredictable.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/kootenay-flood-watch-9.7219964?cmp=rss
Flood risk isn't over yet for greater Montreal region
Water levels remain high, and a second wave of potential flooding is expected at the beginning of May.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/flood-watch-montreal-region-pierrefonds-roxboro-9.7173200?cmp=rss

Global Study Reveals Rapid Land Subsidence in Major River Deltas Threatening Millions

📰 Original title: Hundreds of millions at risk as river deltas sink faster than rising seas

🤖 IA: It's not clickbait ✅
👥 Usuarios: It's not clickbait ✅

View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/global-study-reveals-rapid-land-subsidence-in-major-river-deltas-threatening-millions/?redirpost=13e18bfa-8fc6-45bf-ad46-78f58fa6b4dd

#environment #riverdeltas #subsidence #floodrisk

Global Study Reveals Rapid Land Subsidence in Major River Deltas Threatening Millions

A comprehensive global study led by Leonard Ohenhen and Virginia Tech researchers has found that many of the world’s largest river deltas are sinking faster than rising sea levels…

KillBait Archive

Global Study Reveals Rapid Land Subsidence in Major River Deltas Threatening Millions

📰 Original title: Hundreds of millions at risk as river deltas sink faster than rising seas

🤖 IA: It's not clickbait ✅
👥 Usuarios: It's not clickbait ✅

View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/global-study-reveals-rapid-land-subsidence-in-major-river-deltas-threatening-millions/?redirpost=13e18bfa-8fc6-45bf-ad46-78f58fa6b4dd

#environment #riverdeltas #subsidence #floodrisk

Global Study Reveals Rapid Land Subsidence in Major River Deltas Threatening Millions

A comprehensive global study led by Leonard Ohenhen and Virginia Tech researchers has found that many of the world’s largest river deltas are sinking faster than rising sea levels…

KillBait Archive
Two First Nations in Manitoba declare state of emergency with flood risk 'a certainty'
Two First Nations in Manitoba's Interlake region have declared a state of emergency ahead of a potentially devastating flood.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/peguis-fisher-river-state-of-emergency-flood-9.7169428?cmp=rss
Peguis, Fisher River declare state of emergency with flood risk 'a certainty'
Two First Nations in Manitoba's Interlake region have declared a state of emergency ahead of a potentially devastating flood.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/peguis-fisher-river-state-of-emergency-flood-9.7169428?cmp=rss
Montreal installing dikes, pumps as flood risk rises
Water levels on the Outaouais and des Prairies rivers may spill out of their banks in the coming days, the city says, especially with more rain in the forecast and soil saturation.
#Canada #Montrealweather
https://globalnews.ca/news/11805987/montreal-flood-risks-april-2026/
Montreal installing dikes, pumps as flood risk rises
Water levels on the Outaouais and des Prairies rivers may spill out of their banks in the coming days, the city says, especially with more rain in the forecast and soil saturation.
#Canada #Montrealweather
https://globalnews.ca/news/11805987/montreal-flood-risks-april-2026/