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Heatwave and wildfires worsened Colorado flooding

The storm that battered Colorado was a 1-in-1000-year event, partly caused by a heatwave that for months had been blocking tropical moisture from reaching the Rockies
A year's worth of rain fell in a week
A year鈥檚 worth of rain fell in a week
(Image: Dennis Pierce/AP/PA)

A truly ferocious and exceptional event. That is how Kevin Trenberth of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, describes the storm that pummelled his state last week.

鈥淭his was a once-in-1000-year rainfall,鈥 he says, meaning that the storm was of such an intensity and duration that it had a 1-in-1000 chance of occurring in any given year in Colorado.

The rains and subsequent floods have so far killed eight people, displaced 11,750 and damaged close to 18,000 homes. The city of Boulder received a year鈥檚 rainfall in less than a week, says Daniel Leszcynski at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

That huge volume was due in part to a lingering heatwave that for months blocked tropical moisture from the Gulf of Mexico from reaching the Rocky Mountains, he says. When that heatwave began to move east last week, weak winds allowed the growing storm system to sit above the Colorado peaks for days.

Fire and flood

Once that deluge hit the ground, more trouble awaited. Because of Colorado鈥檚 mountainous terrain, the region is flood-prone anyway but recent wildfires exacerbated things near Boulder and Fort Collins, two areas hardest hit by floodwaters. The fires had cleared land of vegetation that would normally absorb rainwater, says Trenberth.

Urban areas were also hit hard because of their abundance of impenetrable surfaces, says from the National Center for Atmospheric Research. 鈥淐ities have drainage systems designed to move water off streets and into streams as quickly as possible,鈥 he says.

Though natural disasters are difficult to attribute to climate change, says that the 1鈥壦欳 rise in ocean temperature since the 1970s accounts for 5 per cent more moisture in today鈥檚 atmosphere. That鈥檚 enough to invigorate already powerful storms such as last week鈥檚, he says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 natural variability to these events, but maybe there was a little more rain because of climate change,鈥 he says. 鈥淲ith weather, small differences can actually result in big effects in terms of damage done.鈥

Topics: Climate change