Current:Home > MyClimate change likely helped cause deadly Pakistan floods, scientists find -TradeWisdom
Climate change likely helped cause deadly Pakistan floods, scientists find
View
Date:2025-04-28 01:19:43
It is likely that climate change helped drive deadly floods in Pakistan, according to a new scientific analysis. The floods killed nearly 1500 people and displaced more than 30 million, after record-breaking rain in August.
The analysis confirms what Pakistan's government has been saying for weeks: that the disaster was clearly driven by global warming. Pakistan experienced its wettest August since the country began keeping detailed national weather records in 1961. The provinces that were hardest hit by floods received up to eight times more rain than usual, according to the Pakistan Meteorological Department.
Climate change made such heavy rainfall more likely, according to the analysis by a group of international climate scientists in Pakistan, Europe and the United States. While Pakistan has sometimes experienced heavy monsoon rains, about 75 percent more water is now falling during weeks when monsoon rains are heaviest, the scientists estimate.
The analysis is a so-called attribution study, a type of research that is conducted very quickly compared to other climate studies, and is meant to offer policymakers and disaster survivors a rough estimate of how global warming affected a specific weather event. More in-depth research is underway to understand the many ways that climate change affects monsoon rainfall.
For example, while it's clear that intense rain will keep increasing as the Earth heats up, climate models also suggest that overall monsoon rains will be less reliable. That would cause cycles of both drought and flooding in Pakistan and neighboring countries in the future.
Such climate whiplash has already damaged crops and killed people across southeast Asia in recent years, and led to a water crisis in Chennai, India in 2019.
The new analysis also makes clear that human caused climate change was not the only driver of Pakistan's deadly floods. Scientists point out that millions of people live in flood-prone areas with outdated drainage in provinces where the flooding was most severe. Upgrading drainage, moving homes and reinforcing bridges and roads would all help prevent such catastrophic damage in the future.
veryGood! (126)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Travis Kelce’s Training Camp Look Is a Nod to Early Days of Taylor Swift Romance
- The Mitsubishi Starion and Chrysler conquest are super rad and rebadged
- Investigators search for suspect in fatal shooting of Detroit-area officer
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Guns n' Roses' Slash Shares His 25-Year-Old Stepdaughter Has Died
- Nicole Kidman Makes Rare Comments About Ex-Husband Tom Cruise
- Cell phones, clothes ... rent? Inflation pushes teens into the workforce
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Who could replace Joe Biden as the 2024 Democratic nominee?
Ranking
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Ice cream trucks are music to our ears. But are they melting away?
- More money could result in fewer trips to ER, study suggests
- Trump holds first rally with running mate JD Vance
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- 1 pedestrian killed, 1 hurt in Michigan when trailer hauling boat breaks free and strikes them
- Video tutorial: How to react to iMessages using emojis
- At least 11 dead, dozens missing after a highway bridge in China collapses after heavy storms
Recommendation
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
Richard Simmons' staff shares social media post he wrote before his death
Guns n' Roses' Slash Shares His 25-Year-Old Stepdaughter Has Died
LeBron James is named one of Team USA's flag bearers for Opening Ceremony
The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
Officials to release video of officer shooting Black woman in her home after responding to 911 call
12-year-old girl charged with killing 8-year-old cousin over iPhone in Tennessee
No prison for a nursing home owner who sent 800 residents to ride out a hurricane in squalor