How climate change fueled the devastating floods in Germany and northwest Europe
After historic rainfall caused devastating flooding that killed more than 100 people in northwestern Europe and left more than 1,000 missing, officials and scientists arenât being coy about the main culprit: climate change.
In response to footage of the unfolding disaster, German Minister of the Environment Svenja Schulze announced, âThese are the harbingers of climate change that have now arrived in Germany.â European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen called the flooding âa clear indication of climate changeâ and âsomething that really, really shows the urgency to act.â
That European officials would draw a direct line between this extreme weather event and climate change may not be such a surprise, given that it happened just a day after the European Union announced a sweeping set of proposals to address the climate emergency â" proposals that are likely to face stiff opposition from many sectors, including less-affluent EU countries or those that rely heavily on fossil fuels.
A catastrophic weather event hitting right after those proposals were announced certainly helps EU officials illustrate why such ambitious policies are needed.
But itâs not just officials making the connection between the floods in Europe and a warming planet: Even scientists who in the past have been hesitant to explicitly link any one extreme weather event with climate change are clearly stating that climate change likely played a role here.
âThe rainfall weâve experienced across Europe over the past few days is extreme weather whose intensity is being strengthened by climate change â" and will continue to strengthen further with more warming,â Friederike Otto of the Environmental Change Institute at the University of Oxford told German news outlet DW.
This flooding in Germany today is hard to wrap your head around. It really seems like the planet is trying to tell us something pic.twitter.com/o5vCEpk8mk
â" Read Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler (@JoshuaPotash) July 16, 2021This new willingness to make these explicit connections is in part due to advances in attribution science. As Voxâs Umair Irfan has explained, âResearchers now have far more data showing just how much climate change affects the frequency and likelihood of heat waves (and fires that follow them), ocean heat waves, droughts, and intense storms.â
In other words, the more extreme weather events that happen, the more opportunities scientists have to learn about just how bad the impact of climate change really is.
Germanyâs National Meteorological Service said the two most impacted states, Rhineland-Palatinate and North Rhine-Westphalia, recorded between 4 and 6 inches of rain in the 24 hours between July 14 and 15. According to CNN meteorologist Brandon Miller, that amounts to almost as much as the region usually sees in a month.
There are two main links between climate change and extreme rainfall events like the one in northwestern Europe. First, as Hayley Fowler, professor of climate change impacts in the School of Engineering at Newcastle University, told me, a warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture. âAccording to the Clausius-Clapeyron equation, a one-degree rise in temperature has the potential to give you a 7 percent increase in the intensity of rainfall,â Fowler said.
âThe second point is that the [Earthâs] poles are increasing in temperature at two to three times the rate of the equator,â Fowler said. That, she said, âweakens the jet stream of the mid-latitudes, which is basically over Europe. In summer and autumn, the weakening of the jet stream has a knock-on effect causing slower-moving storms. So thereâs a double whammy of increasing intensity, but the storm lingers longer too.â
And that kind of double whammy can have devastating impacts on the land and infrastructure.
âAll this happened very fast, and Iâve never experienced a situation which developed that fast,â Tanja Krok, head of volunteering service in the German Red Cross in North Rhine-Westphalia, told me. Sheâs been working in the region for nearly 30 years. âIn 2002, we had flooding in the east of Germany, but it impacted one region and developed slowly,â Krok said.
The powerful flow of water has also caused landslides, leaving some roads unusable if not completely washed away. âWeâve never had landslides before. We feel like our houses here are stable and fixed. Itâs not often that you see houses collapse,â Krok said.
In addition to climate change, experts have also pointed to communication failures in the European Flood Awareness System.
The German weather service issued warnings for the event on Monday, three days before it actually happened. The hydrological services in Germany also issued a warning. Given the number of warnings in place, experts have said that the problem is not as much forecasting as communicating the severe impacts of flooding events to the greater population.
âThe issue is not that there wasnât a warning in place. There was. Weâve got really good forecasting models now. So, both these events, and also the floods that we saw in New York and London earlier in the week, there were flood warnings in place for those. We knew that heavy rainfall was coming,â Linda Speight, a flood forecasting specialist at the University of Reading in England, told me.
âOver 100 people should not have died in a flood in Germany. That shouldnât happen in Western Europe in 2021,â she said.
Speight, who works at the nexus of hydrology and meteorology to understand how the weather will cause flooding, thinks the high loss of life could be because people did not understand the seriousness of the warnings.
âIf you issue a weather warning which says thereâs going to be 200 millimeters of rain tomorrow, that doesnât mean anything. It doesnât mean a lot to me â" and thatâs my area of specialism, so I doubt it means very much to the general public,â Speight said. âWe need to change how we communicate warnings. For example, instead of saying, âThere will be 200 millimeters of rain,â we need to say, âThere will be rapidly rising water levels, damage to properties, a risk to life.ââ
And as extreme weather events like these become more and more common, learning how to communicate the danger effectively will be even more critical. âAcross the world, we need to get better prepared for these kinds of events,â Speight said. âEverybody can learn lessons from the flood in Germany and see how they can apply them to improve to be more prepared in their own countries.â
But while early-warning systems can help reduce the loss of life, the ultimate answer is for humans to stop emitting carbon dioxide and other planet-warming greenhouse gases.
âThe climate is warming, and it will keep on warming as long as we emit CO2. Last time I checked, weâre still emitting huge amounts of CO2,â Geert Jan van Oldenborgh, a visiting professor at Oxford University who studies the impact of climate change on extreme weather events, said.
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