As the World Warms, Extreme Rain Is Becoming Even More Extreme  
  Even  in places, like Central Texas, with a long history of floods,  human-caused warming is creating the conditions for more frequent and  severe deluges.
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  A person overlooks flooding at the Guadalupe River in Kerrville, Texas, on Saturday.Credit...Ronaldo Schemidt/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
     By  Raymond Zhong
  Climate reporter
  July 5, 2025
  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 When met on the ground with outdated  infrastructure or inadequate warning systems, the results can be  catastrophic.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  Friday, 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 Friday, the quantities of rain that  poured down in a six-hour stretch were so great that they had less than  a tenth of 1 percent chance of falling there in any given year,  according to  data analyzed by Russ Schumacher, a professor of atmospheric science at Colorado State University.
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  The Guadalupe River rose from three 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.
  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 two inches of rain or snow has increased by 20 percent 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 percent by 2036, according to a  report last year by 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. 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 starting  next year. 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.  
  
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   Raymond Zhong reports on climate and environmental issues for The Times
  nytimes.com |