U.S. Senate Urged
to Strengthen Key Global Warming Legislation
Columbus, Ohio—Scientists have
said for years that global warming was “loading the dice” when it comes to
increasing the frequency of severe storms, and a new Environment Ohio report makes it clear that Ohio is already experiencing
extreme downpours much more frequently.
Specifically, the new report found that storms with heavy rainfall are now
43 percent more frequent in Ohio
than they were 60 years ago.
“At the rate we’re going,
what was once the storm of the decade will soon seem like just another downpour,”
said David Lands of the Progressive Voter Network
and Environment Ohio.
David Lands pointed to the rainstorm that hit Findlay in August
of this year as an illustration of what more extreme rainstorms could mean for
the region.
“More frequent downpours,
fueled by global warming, will leave Ohio even
more vulnerable to dangerous flooding in years to come,” said David Lands.
The new Environment Ohio report, When it Rains, It Pours: Global Warming and
the Rising Frequency of Extreme Precipitation in the United States, examines
trends in the frequency of large rain and snow events across the continental United
States from 1948 to 2006. Using data
from 3,000 weather stations and a methodology originally developed by
scientists at the National
Climatic Data
Center and the Illinois
State Water Survey, the report identifies storms with the greatest 24-hour
precipitation totals at each weather station, and analyzes when those storms
occurred.
Nationally, the report shows that
storms with extreme precipitation have increased in frequency by 24 percent
across the continental United
States since 1948. At the state level, 40 states show a
significant trend toward more frequent storms with extreme precipitation, while
only one state (Oregon)
shows a significant decline.
Key findings for the East
North Central Region and Ohio
include:
- Storms with extreme precipitation increased in
frequency by 22% percent in the East North Central Region from 1948 to
2006.
- Ohio experienced a 43% percent increase in extreme
rainstorms during the period studied.
- shows a significant increase in the frequency of
large storms with heavy precipitation, roughly estimated to be a 71%
percent increase over the nearly 60-year period.
These findings are consistent
with the predicted impacts of global warming.
Scientists expect some parts of the United States to receive more
precipitation as a result of global warming, while other parts receive
less. But regardless of the trend in
total precipitation, scientists predict that the rain and snow that does fall
will be more likely to come in big downpours and heavy snowstorms.
Environment Ohio was joined by the Progressive Voter
Network at a press event to release today’s report.
David Lands was careful to note that an increase in the frequency
of extreme rainstorms does not mean more water will be available. Scientists expect that, as global warming
intensifies, longer periods of relative dryness will mark the periods between
extreme rainstorms, increasing the risk of drought. For example, the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) predicts that, under a scenario of intense warming, the
percent of land enduring severe drought globally could be 30 times greater by
the end of the century than it is today.
“How serious this problem
gets is largely within our control – but only if our country acts boldly to
reduce the pollution that fuels global warming,” said David Lands.
According to the most recent
science, the United States
must reduce its total global warming emissions by at least 15 percent by 2020
and by at least 80 percent by 2050 in order to prevent the worst effects of
global warming.
“Steep reductions in global
warming pollution are challenging but achievable,” noted David Lands,
“and we already have the energy efficiency and renewable energy technologies we
need to get started.”
Tomorrow, the U.S. Senate
Environment & Public Works (EPW) Committee is expected to vote on
amendments to the “Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act of 2007” (S. 2191), a
global warming bill introduced by Senators Lieberman (I-CT) and Warner
(R-VA). While recognizing the important
efforts of the bill’s supporters on this critical issue, [Environment State]
said that the legislation must be significantly strengthened to address the
challenge of global warming.
Specifically, the bill’s current pollution reduction targets fall short
of what the science says is necessary to avoid the worst effects of global
warming, and the bill gives away far too many subsidies to dirty and dangerous
energy sources.
“In addition to calling for a strengthening of
the “Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act of 2007”, Senators Brown and
Voinovich and Representative Pryce should cosponsor the Global Warming
Pollution Reduction Act/Safe Climate Act – the only legislation in Congress
that would reduce pollution fast enough to protect future generations from the worst
effects of global warming,” concluded David Lands.