As damaging as it was for more than 32 trillion gallons of rain and snow to fall on California since the winter holidays, a worst-case global warming scenario could juice up similar, future downpours by one-third by the middle of this century, a new study says.
The strongest of California’s storms from atmospheric rivers, long and wide plumes of moisture that form over an ocean and flow through the sky over land, would probably get an overall 34% increase in total precipitation, or another 11 trillion gallons more than just fell. That’s because the rain and snow is likely to be 22% more concentrated at its peak in places that get really doused, and to fall over a considerably larger area if fossil fuel emissions grow uncontrolled, according to a new study in Thursday’s journal Nature Climate Change.
The entire western United States would likely see a 31% increase in precipitation from these worst-of-the-worst storms in a souped-up warming world because of more intense and widely spread rainfall, the study said.
Scientists say the worst-case scenario, which is about 4.4 degrees Celsius of warming since preindustrial times, looks a bit more unlikely since efforts are being undertaken to rein in emissions. If countries do as they promise, temperatures are on track to warm about 2.7 degrees Celsius, according to Climate Action Tracker.
The National Weather Service calculated that California averaged 11.47 inches of precipitation statewide from Dec. 26 to Jan. 17 — including 18.33 inches in Oakland and 47.74 inches in one spot 235 miles north of San Francisco — because of a series of nine devastating atmospheric river storms that caused power outages, flooding, levee breaks, washouts and landslides. At least 20 people died.
