logo
In Texas, Florida and across the globe, warmer climate makes flooding ‘more unprecedented'

In Texas, Florida and across the globe, warmer climate makes flooding ‘more unprecedented'

Miami Herald07-07-2025
As the Texas flooding death toll reached 95 on Monday — at least 27 of them children — and Tropical Storm Chantal prompted dozens of water rescues in North Carolina, some Floridians were reminded of the disastrous 'rain bomb' in 2023 that hit faster and harder than any hurricane in living memory.
Though no one died from the 2 feet of rain that deluged Fort Lauderdale in a single day in April two years ago, the relentless rain forced hundreds to flee to Red Cross shelters, covered airport runways, filled the tunnel that runs under the New River and turned downtown streets into raging rivers.
And, despite the sheer speed with which these floods took people by surprise, they have another thing in common: Climate change made them even more catastrophic.
While the tropical system stuck over Texas' Hill Country — also known as 'Flash Flood Alley' — was expected to cause flooding, 'we also know that climate change is adding just a little bit of extra rain,' Shel Winkley, who worked as a broadcast meteorologist for a CBS-affiliate in Texas, told the Miami Herald.
Overall, the climate is now 1.3 degrees Celsius warmer than before humans started burning fossil fuels, which releases greenhouse gases that trap heat within the atmosphere. The warmer the atmosphere, the more moisture it can hold, and, consequently, release.
Heavier rainfalls likely made the Texas flooding 'even more unprecedented,' said Winkley, who taught at Texas A&M University. 'The question is, would it have come down as fast, and would the river have risen as quickly as it did, without that climate change influence?'
Using a rapid analysis to show how the floods are linked to climate change, scientists in Europe determined that warmer weather fueled the Texas disaster as overall weather conditions in that specific region had gotten wetter compared to the past. The severity of the event, they said, can't be explained by naturally occurring changes to the climate and weather.
Research by Climate Central, a nonprofit science and communications group, also found that, over the past 50 years, rainfall has become heavier in cities like San Antonio, some 60 miles south of the worst flooding, with rainfalls now increased by 6 percent.
In Miami, Climate Central's analysis, which is based on NOAA data, found that the hourly rainfall intensity increased by 12 percent.
Both Florida and Texas are adversely affected because they lie on the Gulf of Mexico, which is currently between 2 to 3 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than the average for the beginning of July, conditions that are 10 to 30 times more likely because of climate change.
This extra heat has given more water molecules the energy they need to 'escape' from the surface and evaporate into the atmosphere, where they're supplying additional moisture, which makes rainfall more intense.
'Climate change loads the dice toward more frequent and more intense floods,' Davide Farranda, an expert on extreme weather events at the French National Center for Scientific Research, said in a statement, adding that the Texas flood 'shows the deadly cost of underestimating this shift.'
'We need to rethink early warning systems, land-use planning, and emergency preparedness. And above all, we must reduce greenhouse gas emissions to limit future risks,' he said.
While cutting greenhouse gas emissions is the only proven solution that can stop things from getting even worse, our atmosphere and oceans react slowly to the CO2 we're emitting. The impact of the fossil fuels burnt today will be felt in decades to come.
That makes adaptation a necessity, especially in places like South Florida, where a lot of infrastructure dates back to the 1950s.
'These extreme events are likely to become more frequent,' said Ben Kirtman, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Miami, referring to the 2023 rain bomb, which overwhelmed Fort Lauderdale with such a sudden deluge that schools had to shut down for two days.
A 1-in-500-year flood, he said, referring to a flood that, statistically speaking, is so devastating it occurs once every 500 years, 'that will maybe be a 1-in-a-100-year flood, or a 1-in-20-year flood,' Kirtman said.
Cities, he said, need to know what to plan for, so infrastructure can be hardened, and at least some catastrophes can be avoided.
Figuring out not just how much rainfall we can expect, but also the frequency and duration of rainfall is exactly what Kirtman and colleagues from across Florida, including the US Geological Service, are trying to figure out.
Six inches of rainfall might not be a lot for a city like Miami, but it wouldn't be able to handle six inches of rain over three, four or five days. Within a year, he and his colleagues hope to have some preliminary data.
Even with that data, keeping people and properties safe from ever heavier flooding can simply prove too costly. Miami, for example, would have had to pay $5.1 billion to upgrade its infrastructure for a 1-in-10-year storm, an extra $1.3 billion compared to adapting for a 1-in-5-year storm. The city tried to find a middle ground, upgrading some projects to higher and others to lower levels.
Though Floridians are used to storms, heavy rain and flooding, being surrounded by a warmer Gulf on all sides and the fact that hurricanes have already become more intense doesn't bode well, Winkley said. And while Florida was less susceptible to river flooding due to its lack of hills, the Texas flood, he said, was 'a warning for everybody.'
This climate report is funded by Florida International University, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and the David and Christina Martin Family Foundation in partnership with Journalism Funding Partners. The Miami Herald retains editorial control of all content.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Flooding kills at least 40 in and around Beijing, many still missing
Flooding kills at least 40 in and around Beijing, many still missing

UPI

time5 hours ago

  • UPI

Flooding kills at least 40 in and around Beijing, many still missing

Bystanders inspect a washed-up car in Taishitun, in Miyun, Beijing, on Tuesday, following deadly flooding in and around the Chinese capital. Photo by Andres Martinez Casares/EPA July 29 (UPI) -- At least 40 people were killed in Beijing after the Chinese capital was hit with severe floods following days of heavy rain across the north of the country, authorities said Tuesday. Most of the casualties were in the hilly northern suburb of Miyun, with 80,000 evacuated to safety, 130 surrounding villages without power and many areas cut off as roads became impassable. Two people were killed in Yanqing, also in the city's north. A further eight people were confirmed killed in a landslide in Chengde city, 140 miles northeast of Beijing, after six months of rain fell over the weekend. Four people are unaccounted for. The body of a passenger from a bus that went missing in Shanxi Province, southwest of Beijing, on Sunday was recovered from a river, but authorities have yet to find the bus and 13 other people riding it. With more heavy rainfall forecast for Tuesday evening local time, President Xi Jinping called for an "all-out" effort by search and rescue teams to find the missing. "No effort should be spared to search for and rescue those missing or trapped, to transfer and resettle residents in affected areas, and to reduce casualties to the greatest extent possible," the president said. Anhui and the coastal provinces of Zhejiang and Jiangsu, as well as Shanghai, were under a Level IV emergency response alert due to approaching typhoon Co-May, with its center currently 300 miles southeast of Shanghai in the East China Sea and moving at around 9 m.p.h. Co-May is gathering strength and is expected to bring heavy rain ahead of coming ashore between Zhoushan and Ningbo in Zhejiang Province sometime during Wednesday, with a possible second landfall in Shanghai's Pudong New Area or Fengxian District. Southern China was also hit. Hong Kong was particularly affected by rainfall in excess of 4 inches an hour, forcing schools to close and authorities to issue landslide alerts and shutter parts of the subway system. Conditions in the north and coastal regions contrasted with other areas of the country, which have been placed under heat alerts with temperatures forecast to top 40 degrees Celsius during the next seven-day period.

Millions in US Told To Stay Inside in 31 States: 'Significant Threat'
Millions in US Told To Stay Inside in 31 States: 'Significant Threat'

Newsweek

time7 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Millions in US Told To Stay Inside in 31 States: 'Significant Threat'

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Millions of Americans across 31 states have been warned to stay inside as temperatures continue to soar—in some areas as high as 120 degrees Fahrenheit . The National Weather Service (NWS) issued extreme heat warnings and heat advisories covering a vast expanse of the country, warning there was a "significant threat" in some regions. Why It Matters Extreme heat poses particular risk to vulnerable populations, such as older adults, young children, and those with certain medical conditions and is responsible for around 700 deaths a year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has also warned of the potentially lethal risk of extreme heat to those who work in warm environments, either inside or outside. What To Know The weather alerts stretched from the Southern Plains and Southeast up through portions of the Midwest and Northeast. The 31 affected states include: Alabama (Extreme Heat Warning) Arizona (Extreme Heat Warning) Arkansas (Extreme Heat Warning) Connecticut (Heat Advisory) Delaware (Heat Advisory) Florida (Extreme Heat Warning) Georgia (Extreme Heat Warning) Illinois (Heat Advisory) Indiana (Heat Advisory) Iowa (Heat Advisory) Kansas (Heat Advisory) Kentucky (Extreme Heat Warning) Louisiana (Extreme Heat Warning) Maine (Heat Advisory) Massachusetts (Heat Advisory) Michigan (Heat Advisory) Mississippi (Extreme Heat Warning) Missouri (Extreme Heat Warning) Nebraska (Heat Advisory) New Hampshire (Heat Advisory) New Jersey (Heat Advisory) New York (Extreme Heat Warning) North Carolina (Heat Advisory) Ohio (Heat Advisory) Oklahoma (Heat Advisory) Pennsylvania (Heat Advisory) Rhode Island (Heat Advisory) South Carolina (Heat Advisory) Tennessee (Extreme Heat Warning) Texas (Heat Advisory) West Virginia (Extreme Heat Warning) According to the NWS, forecasts indicated daytime high temperatures could climb well above seasonal averages, with heat indexes—measurements combining air temperature and humidity—expected to reach dangerous levels. Extreme heat exposure can have a wide range of impacts on health in the long term. "We often see increases in cardiovascular disease and kidney disease with exposure to extreme heat," Jaime Madrigano, a professor of American health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Maryland, told Newsweek. She added that respiratory disease is also "linked to heat exposure and one thing to keep in mind is that high temperatures can contribute to a buildup of harmful pollutants in the air." "There have also been studies that have shown that extreme heat exposure is associated with poor reproductive outcomes, like pre-term birth, and even mood and anxiety disorders," Madrigano said. The NWS advised those in affected states to stay indoors, while limiting time outdoors, to reduce strenuous activities, stay hydrated, and check on vulnerable relatives and neighbors. Madrigano said that if people don't have access to air conditioning at home, "many communities set up community cooling centers in libraries or other accessible locations." She also recommended wearing loose, lightweight clothing and "minimizing outdoor activities." OSHA also has guidance on its website for employers of those who work in hot environments. Key recommendations include providing regular breaks in shaded or air-conditioned environments and hydration. Rescheduling strenuous activities to early morning or evening is also advised. What People Are Saying Jaime Madrigano, a professor of American health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Maryland, told Newsweek: "It is concerning because heat isn't just uncomfortable, it can be hazardous to your health and even deadly. We know that June brought above-average temperatures, compared to what we normally see for that time of year, across the country. And many of those same places are getting hit again. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has already predicted that the month of July will be hotter than average." She added: "Classic signs of heat exposure include heat cramps, heat exhaustion and heatstroke, which is potentially fatal; and these are all related to the body overheating. But it's important to note that those conditions which people most often think of as associated with heat exposure are just a small portion of the health impacts that we see when we look carefully at data from an extreme heat event." What Happens Next The NWS issues regular forecast updates on its website.

The beauty industry loves argan oil. But demand, and drought, are straining Morocco and its trees
The beauty industry loves argan oil. But demand, and drought, are straining Morocco and its trees

The Hill

time15 hours ago

  • The Hill

The beauty industry loves argan oil. But demand, and drought, are straining Morocco and its trees

SMIMOU, Morocco (AP) — Argan oil runs through your fingers like liquid gold — hydrating, luscious, and restorative. Prized worldwide as a miracle cosmetic, it's more than that in Morocco. It's a lifeline for rural women and a byproduct of a forest slowly buckling under the weight of growing demand. To make it, women crouch over stone mills and grind down kernels. One kilogram — roughly two days of work — earns them around $3, enough for a modest foothold in an economy where opportunities are scarce. It also links them to generations past. 'We were born and raised here. These traditions come from nature, what our parents and grandparents have taught us and what we've inherited,' cooperative worker Fatma Mnir said. Long a staple in local markets, argan oil today is in luxury hair and skin care products lining drugstore aisles worldwide. But its runaway popularity is threatening argan forests, with overharvesting piled on top of drought straining trees once seen as resilient in the harshest of conditions. Hafida El Hantati, owner of one of the cooperatives that harvests the fruit and presses it for oil, said the stakes go beyond the trees, threatening cherished traditions. 'We must take care of this tree and protect it because if we lose it, we will lose everything that defines us and what we have now,' she said at the Ajddigue cooperative outside the coastal town of Essaouira. A forest out of time For centuries, argan trees have supported life in the arid hills between the Atlantic Ocean and the Atlas Mountains, feeding people and animals, holding soil in place and helping keep the desert from spreading. The spiny trees can survive in areas with less than an inch of annual rain and heat up to 50 degrees Celsius (122 Fahrenheit). They endure drought with roots that stretch as far as 115 feet (35 meters) underground. Goats climb trees, chomp their fruit, and eventually disperse seeds as part of the forest's regeneration cycle. Moroccans stir the oil into nut butters and drizzle it over tagines. Rich in vitamin E, it's lathered onto dry hair and skin to plump, moisturize and stave off damage. Some use it to calm eczema or heal chicken pox. But the forest has thinned. Trees bear fewer fruit, their branches gnarled from thirst. In many places, cultivated land has replaced them as fields of citrus and tomatoes, many grown for export, have expanded. Communities once managed forests collectively, setting rules for grazing and harvesting. Now the system is fraying, with theft routinely reported. What's wrong with the forest But a forest that covered about 5,405 square miles (14,000 square kilometers) at the turn of the century has shrunk by 40%. Scientists warn that argan trees are not invincible. 'Because argan trees acted as a green curtain protecting a large part of southern Morocco against the encroaching Sahara, their slow disappearance has become considered as an ecological disaster,' said Zoubida Charrouf, a chemist who researches argan at Université Mohammed V in Rabat. Shifting climate is a part of the problem. Fruit and flowers sprout earlier each year as rising temperatures push the seasons out of sync. Goats that help spread seeds can be destructive, too, especially if they feed on seedlings before they mature. Overgrazing has become worse as herders and fruit collectors fleeing drier regions encroach on plots long allocated to specific families. The forests also face threats from camels bred and raised by the region's wealthy. Camels stretch their necks into trees and chomp entire branches, leaving lasting damage, Charrouf said. Liquid gold, dry pockets Today, women peel, crack and press argan for oil at hundreds of cooperatives. Much makes its way through middlemen to be sold in products by companies and subsidiaries of L'Oréal, Unilever, and Estée Lauder. But workers say they earn little while watching profits flow elsewhere. Cooperatives say much of the pressure stems from climbing prices. A 1-liter bottle sells for 600 Moroccan dirhams ($60), up from 25 dirhams ($2.50) three decades ago. Products infused with argan sell for even more abroad. Cosmetics companies call argan the most expensive vegetal oil on the market. The coronavirus pandemic upended global demand and prices and many cooperatives closed. Cooperative leaders say new competitors have flooded the market just as drought has diminished how much oil can be squeezed from each fruit. Cooperatives were set up to provide women a base pay and share profits each month. But Union of Women's Argan Cooperatives President Jamila Id Bourrous said few make more than Morocco's minimum monthly wage. 'The people who sell the final product are the ones making the money,' she said. Some businesses say large multinational companies use their size to set prices and shut others out. Khadija Saye, a co-owner of Ageourde Cooperative, said there were real fears about monopoly. 'Don't compete with the poor for the one thing they live from,' she said. 'When you take their model and do it better because you have money, it's not competition, it's displacement.' One company, Olvea, controls 70% of the export market, according to data from local cooperatives. Cooperatives say few competitors can match its capacity to fill big orders for global brands. Representatives for the company did not respond to requests for comment. Mounting challenges, limited solutions On a hill overlooking the Atlantic, a government water truck weaves between rows of trees, pausing to hose saplings that have just started to sprout. The trees are a project that Morocco began in 2018, planting 39 square miles (100 square kilometers) on private lands abutting the forests. To conserve water and improve soil fertility, argan trees alternate rows with capers, a technique known as intercropping. The idea is to expand forest cover and show that argan, if properly managed, can be a viable source of income. Officials hope it will ease pressure on the overharvested commons and convince others to reinvest in the land. The trees were expected to begin producing this year but haven't during a drought. Another issue is the supply chain. 'Between the woman in the village and the final buyer, there are four intermediaries. Each takes a cut. The cooperatives can't afford to store, so they sell cheap to someone who pays upfront,' Id Bourrous, the union president, said. The government has attempted to build storage centers to help producers hold onto their goods longer and negotiate better deals. So far, cooperatives say it hasn't worked, but a new version is expected in 2026 with fewer barriers to access. Despite problems, there's money to be made. During harvest season, women walk into the forest with sacks, scanning the ground for fallen fruit. To El Hantati, the forest, once thick and humming with life, feels quieter now. Only the winds and creaking trees are audible as goats climb branches in search of remaining fruits and leaves. 'When I was young, we'd head into the forest at dawn with our food and spend the whole day gathering. The trees were green all year long,' she said. She paused, worried about the future as younger generations pursue education and opportunities in larger cities. 'I'm the last generation that lived our traditions — weddings, births, even the way we made oil. It's all fading.' Islam Aatfaoui contributed reporting. ___

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store