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Climate change may mean more extreme rain after wildfire in western US
[New Scientist] The risk of extreme rainfall in areas that have recently experienced wildfires may increase significantly by the end of the century in the western United States, if greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise unabated.
"Or drought. We're not sure. Either way, it'll be EXTREME!!11!"
"In many places in the western US, we experience a lot of natural disasters," says Samantha Stevenson at the University of California, Santa Barbara. "Some of the most important ones are wildfires, many of which have burned through California and other western states recently. We also have rainstorms that can lead to devastating floods. Climate change has been known to amplify both these things."

Following wildfires, there is a higher risk of landslides and flash floods for several years in the burned area because it takes time for the ground cover and vegetation that was once there to regrow. Heavy rainfall can trigger these events.

Stevenson and her colleagues decided to study how often these extreme rainfall events will occur following a wildfire over the coming decades. The team ran simulations of the climate in the western US, under the most extreme warming scenario — in which greenhouse gases continue to be emitted uncapped.
Posted by: Besoeker 2022-04-03
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=629357