As the world warms, extreme rain is becoming even more extreme
Colossal bursts of rain like the ones that caused the
deadly flooding in Texas are becoming more frequent and intense around the globe as the burning of fossil fuels heats the planet, scientists say.
Warm air holds more moisture than cool air, and as temperatures rise, storms can produce bigger downpours. When met on the ground with outdated infrastructure or inadequate warning systems, the results can be catastrophic.
These were the ingredients for tragedy in Texas, a state that is well acquainted with weather extremes of all kinds: high heat and deep cold, deluges and droughts, tornadoes and hurricanes, hail and snow.
Indeed, the Hill Country, the part of the state where the Guadalupe River swelled on July 4, is sometimes called 'flash flood alley' for how at risk it is to seemingly out-of-nowhere surges of water.
Humid air blows into the area from two main sources, the Gulf of Mexico and the tropical Pacific Ocean. When this air collides with cool air drifting down across the Great Plains, severe storms can erupt. The hilly terrain and steep canyons quickly funnel the rain into river valleys, transforming lazy streams into roaring cascades.
In parts of Texas that were flooded on July 4, the quantities of rain that poured down in a six-hour stretch were so great that they had less than a tenth of 1 per cent chance of falling there in any given year, according to data analysed by Dr Russ Schumacher, a professor of atmospheric science at Colorado State University.
The Guadalupe River rose from 3 feet to 34 feet in about 90 minutes, according to data from a river gauge near the town of Comfort, Texas. The volume of water exploded from 95 cubic feet per second to 166,000 cubic feet per second.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Singapore First BTO project in Sembawang North to be offered in July launch
Singapore TTSH to demolish century-old pavilion wards, keeping one as heritage marker
World 'Formed to give you back your freedom': Elon Musk says he has created a new US political party
Singapore Tank collides into traffic light during National Day Parade national education show
Singapore His world crashed when he got F9 in O-level Tamil but PropNex co-founder Ismail Gafoor beat the odds
Asia HIV surge in the Philippines amid poor sex education, policy gaps
Tech Graduates are not screwed if they study engineering: James Dyson in response to Economist article
Business When a foreign wife failed to turn up for a $10m divorce
And the warming climate is creating the conditions in Texas for more of these sharp, deadly deluges.
In the eastern part of the state, the number of days per year with at least 2 inches of rain or snow has increased by 20 per cent since 1900, according to the most recent National Climate Assessment, the federal government's flagship report on how global warming is affecting the United States.
Across Texas, the intensity of extreme rain could increase another 10 per cent by 2036, according to a report last year by Dr John Nielsen-Gammon, the Texas state climatologist.
To understand patterns of heavy rain at a more local level, communities and officials rely on data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
The agency has for decades published nationwide estimates of the probabilities of various precipitation events – that is, a certain number of inches falling in a particular location over a given amount of time, from five minutes to 24 hours to 60 days.
Engineers use NOAA's estimates to design storm drains and culverts. City planners use them to guide development and regulations in flood-prone areas.
NOAA's next updates to the estimates are scheduled to be released from 2026. For the first time, they are expected to include projections of how extreme precipitation will evolve as the climate changes, in order to help officials plan further ahead.
But in recent months, the Trump administration has cut staff at the agency and at the National Weather Service, which sits within NOAA.
The administration has also dismissed the hundreds of experts who had been compiling the next edition of the National Climate Assessment, which was scheduled to come out in 2028. And it is proposing deep cuts to NOAA's 2026 budget, including eliminating the office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research, which conducts and coordinates climate research. NYTIMES
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
‘Hot wasps' found at US nuclear facility in South Carolina
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox On July 3, workers found a radioactive wasp nest on a post near a tank used to store nuclear waste. Three additional nests have since been found. COLUMBIA - Four radioactive wasp nests have been discovered at a South Carolina nuclear facility, according to federal officials. The first nest, which was found by workers at the Savannah River Site early in July, was recently disclosed in a report from the Department of Energy, which owns the site. The facility, near Aiken, South Carolina, produced material for nuclear weapons throughout the Cold War. Three additional nests have since been discovered at the site, officials told The New York Times on Aug 1. 'The US Department of Energy is managing the discovery of four wasp nests with very low levels of radioactive contamination,' Mr Edwin Deshong, the manager of the department's Savannah River Operations Office, said in an emailed statement. 'The nests do not pose a health risk to SRS workers, the community, or the environment.' But the discovery raised questions about the extent of the environmental contamination at the site, said Professor Timothy Mousseau, a biologist at the University of South Carolina who studies organisms and ecosystems in radioactive regions of the world, including Chernobyl, Ukraine, and Fukushima, Japan. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Tech Reporting suspected advanced cyber attacks will provide a defence framework: Shanmugam Business Singapore's US tariff rate stays at 10%, but the Republic is not out of the woods yet Asia Asia-Pacific economies welcome new US tariff rates, but concerns over extent of full impact remain Business ST explains: How Trump tariffs could affect Singapore SMEs, jobs and markets Asia Indonesia's Mount Lewotobi Laki-laki erupts Singapore Thundery showers expected on most days in first half of August Singapore Synapxe chief executive, MND deputy secretary to become new perm secs on Sept 1 Singapore 5 women face capital charges after they were allegedly found with nearly 27kg of cocaine in S'pore 'This is an indicator that there are contaminants spread across this area that have not been completely encased and protected,' Prof Mousseau said. The discovery of additional radioactive nests, he added, indicates 'that much greater effort must be made to assess the possible risks and hazards of what appears to be a significant source of radioactive pollutants.' A 2011 photo shows workers decommissioning heavy water infrastructure at the Savannah River Site, near Aiken, South Carolina. PHOTO: NYTIMES Here's what to know: What is the Savannah River Site? The Savannah River Site, formerly known as the Savannah River Plant, sits on 800 sq km in the sandhills of South Carolina, close to the Georgia border. The facility was built in the 1950s to produce materials for nuclear weapons. For decades, the site produced plutonium and tritium, a key component of hydrogen bombs. The production of material for nuclear weapons ramped down after the end of the Cold War, and the Department of Energy began cleaning up the site in 1996. But the process has dragged on well past its initially projected completion date. Officials now say that cleanup activities will be complete by 2065. In 2018, the first Trump administration announced plans to repurpose an unfinished building at the site to produce plutonium 'pits' – the cores of nuclear weapons. Production is expected to begin in the 2030s. What did workers find? Workers at the site routinely monitor the grounds for signs of radioactivity. On July 3, they discovered a radioactive wasp nest on a post near a tank used to store nuclear waste. 'The wasp nest was sprayed to kill wasps, then bagged as radiological waste,' the federal report said. 'The ground and surrounded area did not have any contamination.' But the report omitted key details, Prof Mousseau said, including the absolute level of radioactivity in the nest and the specific isotopes that were found, which would provide clues about the source of the contamination. Three additional nests were subsequently discovered during 'routine work activities,' a spokesperson for the Department of Energy said in an email on Aug 1. How did the nests become radioactive? It's not entirely clear, but the initial Department of Energy report said that the radioactivity resulted from 'on-site legacy radioactive contamination,' rather than from a leak or 'loss of contamination control.' That's a reasonable explanation, said Prof Mousseau, who has studied birds at the site. 'There's some legacy radioactive contamination sitting around in the mud in the bottom of the lakes, or, you know, here and there,' he said. The report did not disclose the species of wasp involved, but many wasps make their nests out of wood that they chew into a pulp. It was not far-fetched to imagine that they came across some contaminated rotting wood that had escaped previous detection and used the material to make their nest, Prof Mousseau said. How alarming is the discovery of radioactive wasp nests? Wasps don't typically travel far from their nests, Prof Mousseau said, and the 'hot wasps,' as he called them, probably posed little direct risk to the public. But there are other potential risks. 'The main concern relates to whether or not there are large areas of significant contamination that have escaped surveillance in the past,' he said. 'Alternatively, this could indicate that there is some new or old radioactive contamination that is coming to the surface that was unexpected.' In 2017, workers found radioactive bird droppings on the roof of a building at the site, and birds can carry radioactivity long distances, spreading it across the landscape, Prof Mousseau said. The wasp nests are a 'red flag' that should lead to more surveillance and investigation, he added. 'We would like to know a lot more about what this actually represents, and just how common it is and whether there is any evidence of these radionuclides being moved through the ecosystem,' Prof Mousseau said. NYTIMES

Straits Times
3 hours ago
- Straits Times
Chinese soccer team train for inaugural World Humanoid Robot Games
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox A T1 humanoid robot developed by Booster Robotics falls on a football pitch, during a practice in preparation for soccer competitions at the inaugural World Humanoid Robot Games, at the National Speed Skating Oval in Beijing, China August 1, 2025. REUTERS/Florence Lo BEIJING - On a soccer pitch in Beijing, "T1" is practising shots and taking up positions. T1 is no ordinary player, however, but a gold medal-winning humanoid robot training for the first World Humanoid Robot Games, taking place in Beijing from August 15. T1 is part of a race to take the lead in humanoid robotics, as China looks to become more self-sufficient in advanced technologies. The Games will bring together teams from more than 20 countries for events ranging from track and field to dance and martial arts, as well as practical applications such as industrial handling and medical services. T1 and its two teammates, fielded by Tsinghua University's Hephaestus team, made history for China last month by winning gold in the "Humanoid, adult size" category of the 28-year-old RoboCup Humanoid League in Brazil. "The Chinese government is actively promoting humanoid robot development," said Zhao Mingguo, Chief Scientist at Booster Robotics, maker of the T1. "To advance technology, the government is actively organising competitive events, and this sports games is one such experience." While some may dismiss such events as gimmicks, industry experts and participants see them as a decisive spur to advance humanoid robots toward practical real-world deployment. Although the Hephaestus team would hardly trouble even junior human opposition, Booster Robotics views soccer as a powerful test of perception, decision-making and control technologies that could later be applied in factories or homes. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Tech Reporting suspected advanced cyber attacks will provide a defence framework: Shanmugam Business Singapore's US tariff rate stays at 10%, but the Republic is not out of the woods yet Asia Asia-Pacific economies welcome new US tariff rates, but concerns over extent of full impact remain Business ST explains: How Trump tariffs could affect Singapore SMEs, jobs and markets Asia Indonesia's Mount Lewotobi Laki-laki erupts Singapore Thundery showers expected on most days in first half of August Singapore Synapxe chief executive, MND deputy secretary to become new perm secs on Sept 1 Singapore 5 women face capital charges after they were allegedly found with nearly 27kg of cocaine in S'pore "Playing football is a testing and training ground for ... helping us refine our capabilities," Zhao said. And just as in real life, moving on from the training ground is often a challenge. Hephaestus is building on software developed for Brazil to improve the players' positioning skills. But the performance of humanoid robots still depends to a great extent on environmental variables such as the surface and hardness of the ground and the gradient of any slopes, according to Hephaestus's Chen Penghui. It wouldn't be the first time a soccer team had visited a new venue and bemoaned the state of the pitch. REUTERS

Straits Times
10 hours ago
- Straits Times
HK universities see success in drive to attract more top talent from abroad
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox The city has also been increasingly aligning its economic development with China's objectives. – Professor Gao Yang, a prominent scholar in the fields of robotics and aerospace, left King's College London to join the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology in May after being approached to take up new roles there. While her move back to Asia was primarily driven by her family's needs, she said Hong Kong's current focus on developing its scientific fields at a world-class level as a strategic driver for long-term growth was a major pull factor for her. At the same time, the geopolitical and economic climates elsewhere in the world – in particular Western countries – have become increasingly challenging for academics to navigate. Said Prof Gao: 'Compared with the greater uncertainties in the UK and Europe, the situation in Hong Kong in terms of the volume and scale of support poured into research, innovation and commercialisation looks a lot more positive, stable and sustainable. The investment in (my field of) aerospace programming definitely seems more determined and committed.' The mainland China-born academic, who has spent 20 years teaching in the United Kingdom after a decade of studying in Singapore, now heads HKUST's Centre for AI Robotics in Space Sustainability and Space Science and Technology Institute, and teaches at its department of mechanical and aerospace engineering. Professor Gao Yang, from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology's department of mechanical and aerospace engineering. PHOTO: HONG KONG UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Prof Gao is one of the successes that Hong Kong is seeing in its drive to attract more international talent to teach at the city's top universities. It comes as the Asian financial hub ramps up efforts to develop its artificial intelligence and science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) industries as engines to power future growth in the city. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Tech Reporting suspected advanced cyber attacks will provide a defence framework: Shanmugam Singapore Tanjong Katong sinkhole: Road will progressively open to motorists from Aug 2 noon World Trump modifies reciprocal tariffs ahead of deadline; rate on Singapore remains at 10% Business Singapore's US tariff rate stays at 10%, but the Republic is not out of the woods yet Singapore Thundery showers expected on most days in first half of August Singapore Synapxe chief executive, MND deputy secretary to become new perm secs on Sept 1 Singapore 5 women face capital charges after they were allegedly found with nearly 27kg of cocaine in S'pore Business Sumo Salad had valid insurance coverage for work injury claims: MOM The city has also been increasingly aligning its economic development with China's objectives , which include ramping up technological innovation and scientific research in competition with the US. Statistics from some Hong Kong universities have shown a notable rise in new faculty appointments from abroad. But that many of these scholars are of mainland Chinese origin has raised some concerns about talent diversity. One of the city's eight publicly funded universities, HKUST said it had 'welcomed more than 100 top scholars and scientists from mainland China, the United States, Germany, France, South Korea, Singapore and other countries' since it started a global recruitment campaign in October 2022. It 'aims to hire another 100 faculty members', the university told The Straits Times. The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), also publicly funded, told ST it had 'recruited over 150 leading international and promising young scholars from 15 regions including mainland China, Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Europe and North America' since 2023. Its programmes have been 'attracting top non-local research talents to Hong Kong to participate in innovation and technology development', it added. Hong Kong's education chief Christine Choi also revealed in April that 'world-renowned professors from US institutions are relocating to Hong Kong', driven by tighter visa policies and geopolitical tensions affecting traditional Western study destinations. She declined, however, to provide more details citing a 'need for discretion to ensure smooth transitions'. Among prominent international scholars who have relocated to Hong Kong over the past year are meteorologist Chen Fei, who worked in the US National Centre for Atmospheric Research for 26 years, and Harvard University-trained economist Jin Keyu, who was a tenured professor at the London School of Economics for 15 years. Both academics joined HKUST. HKUST has been among the most proactive of the city's tertiary institutions in taking advantage of global developments to attract international talent, academics and students alike, to Hong Kong. In May, it promised unconditional offers to Harvard University students immediately after the US government moved to halt foreign enrolment at the college. In Britain, its flagging economy has affected research funding for many academics as grants are based on a proportion of the country's gross domestic product, noted Prof Gao. 'As this situation carries on, it is likely to affect more domains and bring more academics to Asia,' she told ST. Of her experience in Hong Kong so far, Prof Gao said she was 'completely surprised and amazed by the proactive engagement from sectors including the decision-making think tanks, businesses, the government and industry to build dialogue' in her field. 'Such seamless collaboration between the scientific community and think tanks will help make a more profound impact on society beyond just academia,' she added. Over at CUHK, global STEM scholar and prominent mathematics professor Wei Juncheng moved back to Hong Kong in late 2024 after 11 years of teaching at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Canada. Professor Wei Juncheng, Choh-Ming Li Professor of Mathematics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. PHOTO: COURTESY OF PROF WEI JUNCHENG Prior to his stint at UBC, Wuhan-born Prof Wei, 57, had taught for 18 years at CUHK after obtaining his PhD from the University of Minnesota in the US. 'In the last few years, tensions between the US and China have somehow also spilled over into Canada, affecting the environment in academia as well,' Prof Wei told ST. 'Applying for research grants has become more difficult and political for some academics (in Canada),' he said, adding that many mainland-born scholars applying for funding were now required to fill up more forms delving into their backgrounds and specify that they were not researching in areas of strategic sensitivity or that would help China. Tighter visa restrictions have also impeded global exchanges as the once-frequent Chinese government-sponsored academic visitors can no longer obtain visas to visit Canadian universities for learning and collaboration, he added. There have also been reports of Chinese authorities restricting educators from leaving the country or visiting universities overseas. Prof Wei said he has observed a large and growing number of mainland-origin academics leaving the West in recent years. 'Despite having been educated in the US, many of my mainland-born academia friends there have moved back to China, with the influx accelerating especially in 2025,' he said. 'I chose to return to Hong Kong as I'm already familiar with CUHK's environment and I still prefer the internet and academic freedom we enjoy here.' The recent inflow of internationally trained scholars into Hong Kong comes after the city's public universities reported a record number of academic staff departures two years ago. Some 7.6 per cent of staff, or 380 out of about 5,000 in the eight institutes, quit in the 2022/2023 academic year, while 7.4 per cent left the year before. The departures coincided with a mass exodus of both local and foreign talent following the Covid-19 pandemic and the imposition of a national security law in Hong Kong in 2020. Some analysts have raised concerns, however, that those hired to fill the vacancies are tilted heavily towards mainland-born scholars, potentially affecting academic diversity. Mainland-origin academics have outnumbered their local counterparts at nearly all of the eight publicly funded universities since 2023. Some 41 per cent of all of the institutes' academic staff are now from mainland China, according to official data. Student numbers in Hong Kong's universities have also increasingly veered towards mainlanders, accounting for 74 per cent of the city's pool of non-local first-year students in the 2024/2025 academic year. Hong Kong's growing numbers of mainland-born academics are due to both push and pull factors, according to Associate Professor Alfred Wu, from the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy in Singapore. 'The push factor is the increasing difficulty for these scholars to continue operating in the West, while the pull factor is that – with Hong Kong now paying a lot more attention to research that integrates well into the Greater Bay Area's (GBA) development plans – it makes academic collaboration much smoother for these scholars as they understand mainland Chinese culture much better,' Prof Wu told ST. The GBA refers to the region comprising Hong Kong, Macau and nine cities in mainland China's Guangdong province. But the consequent drop in diversity within academia could hinder the city's ability to innovate, adapt to global changes and maintain its competitiveness as an international hub, Prof Wu suggested. 'People need to think long term – having diversity means that we try to reduce our risks by not putting all our eggs into one basket,' he said. 'Decreasing diversity in Hong Kong universities may not be a problem now, but the situation may be different a decade or two down the road if Hong Kong's focus for growth has to shift away from its alignment with mainland China.'