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Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013
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Page 1: Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013.

Climate, Change and Flood Planning

CCTAG April 2013

Page 2: Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013.

Talk Overview

• Flood Planning Overview

• Atmospheric Rivers Past, Present, and Future

• The Climate Change Design Storm Framework

Page 3: Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013.

Flood Planning

• Plan to designated threshold stage or flow• Designation linked to return period

(e.g. 100-year flood)• Bulletin 17-B Guidelines provide means to

statistically estimate peak stream flow and volume associated with a given duration (e.g. 3-day volume)

• Methods only consider historical data

Page 4: Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013.
Page 5: Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013.

Year to Year Precipitation Variability

Dettinger et al, 2011

Std Dev of Annual PrecipitationMean Annual Precipitation

California precipitation is uniquely variable

Page 6: Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013.

Determining Flood Adaptation Capacity

Source: Dessai and Hulme, 2003

Top-down approaches not workable for flood management at this time

Page 7: Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013.

GOES IR image of major West Coast storm• Time = 0030 UTC 5 January 2008• Low pressure center is off WA coast

The Storm of 4-5 Jan 2008Note that major impacts were focused >500 miles south of the Low pressure center in this storm.

This differs significantly from hurricanes, but the impacts are enormous and spread over a large area

L

~500 miles

Atmospheric river

7-13 in rain

6-10 ft snow

Many major impacts are associated with the landfall of the “atmospheric river” element of the storm, the precise characteristics of which are not operationally monitored offshore or onshore.

32 ft waves

Adapted from M. Ralph

Page 8: Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013.

Flux Magnitude and Duration are Key

Adapted from M. Ralph

Page 9: Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013.

Storm Track changes

Flooding & water supply

MJO/Tropical Convection ENSO

Key Phenomena Affecting California Water Supply/Flooding:

Atmospheric

River

Easterly Wave

Cyclogensis

L

The most extreme CA storm would result from a rare alignment of key processes acting on different

space and time scalesAdapted from M. Ralph

Page 10: Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013.
Page 11: Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013.

Climate Change and Floods

Page 12: Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013.

Building a Framework for Climate Change and Design Floods

• Central Valley Hydrology Study (USACE)

• Climate Variability Sensitivity Study (USACE)

• Atmospheric River Characteristics Study (Scripps)

• Watershed Controls on Extreme Precipitation Study (UC Davis)

• 21st Century Extreme Precipitation Monitoring Network (DWR/NOAA ESRL/Scripps)

Page 13: Climate, Change and Flood Planning CCTAG April 2013.

Goal: Design storm that can accommodate climate change

Atmospheric River Event (ARE) - moisture flux - duration - freezing elevation - direction

Watershed Controls-orographic enhancement distribution-antecedent conditions

- snow line- basin wetness

Flood Hydrograph-peak-volume-critical duration

Design Rainfall Event-volume and peak-duration-spatial distribution

Flood Management Infrastructure Evaluation

Existing USACE Methods

Sierra Barrier Jet Characteristics

Present and Future Conditions