Abstract. The effects of climate change are causing more frequent extreme rainfall
events and an increased risk of flooding in developed areas. Quantifying this
increased risk is of critical importance for the protection of life and
property as well as for infrastructure planning and design. The updated
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Atlas 14
intensity–duration–frequency (IDF) relationships and temporal patterns are
widely used in hydrologic and hydraulic modeling for design and planning in
the United States. Current literature shows that rising temperatures as a
result of climate change will result in an intensification of rainfall. These
impacts are not explicitly included in the NOAA temporal patterns, which can
have consequences on the design and planning of adaptation and flood
mitigation measures. In addition there is a lack of detailed hydraulic
modeling when assessing climate change impacts on flooding. The study
presented in this paper uses a comprehensive hydrologic and hydraulic model
of a fully developed urban/suburban catchment to explore two primary
questions related to climate change impacts on flood risk. (1) How do climate
change effects on storm temporal patterns and rainfall volumes impact
flooding in a developed complex watershed? (2) Is the storm temporal pattern
as critical as the total volume of rainfall when evaluating urban flood risk?
We use the NOAA Atlas 14 temporal patterns, along with the expected increase
in temperature for the RCP8.5 scenario for 2081–2100, to project temporal
patterns and rainfall volumes to reflect future climatic change. The model
results show that different rainfall patterns cause variability in flood
depths during a storm event. The changes in the projected temporal patterns
alone increase the risk of flood magnitude up to 35 %, with the
cumulative impacts of temperature rise on temporal patterns and the storm
volume increasing flood risk from 10 to 170 %. The results also show that
regional storage facilities are sensitive to rainfall patterns that are
loaded in the latter part of the storm duration, while extremely intense
short-duration storms will cause flooding at all locations. This study shows
that changes in temporal patterns will have a significant impact on
urban/suburban flooding and need to be carefully considered and adjusted to
account for climate change when used for the design and planning of future storm
water systems.
It is now well established that our warming planet is experiencing changes in extreme storms and floods, resulting in a need to better specify hydrologic design guidelines that can be projected into the future. This paper attempts to summarize the nature of changes occurring and the impact they are having on the design flood magnitude, with a focus on the urban catchments that we will increasingly reside in as time goes on. Two lines of reasoning are used to assess and model changes in design hydrology. The first of these involves using observed storms and soil moisture conditions and projecting how these may change into the future. The second involves using climate model simulations of the future and using them as inputs into hydrologic models to assess the changed design estimates. We discuss here the limitations in both and suggest that the two are, in fact, linked, as climate model projections for the future are needed in the first approach to form meaningful projections for the future. Based on the author's experience with both lines of reasoning, this invited commentary presents a theoretical narrative linking these two and identifying factors and assumptions that need to be validated before implementation in practice.
This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Intensification of short-duration rainfall extremes and implications for flash flood risks’.
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