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Changing Climate - Resilient Communities Climate science for natural hazard mitigation planning July 22, 2015 Dane County Emergency Management David S.

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Presentation on theme: "Changing Climate - Resilient Communities Climate science for natural hazard mitigation planning July 22, 2015 Dane County Emergency Management David S."— Presentation transcript:

1 Changing Climate - Resilient Communities Climate science for natural hazard mitigation planning July 22, 2015 Dane County Emergency Management David S. Liebl UW-Madison, EPD; UW-Cooperative Extension; Wisconsin Initiative on Climate Change Impacts

2 The arrow of time 1950 2015 2050 Average Annual Temperature Frequency of Heat Waves / Drought Probability of Extreme Rain / Snow GHG Emissions 2025 Long Planning Horizons Climate change occurs over decades, are stakeholder planning and management strategies in the same time frame? 42.8⁰F 48.7⁰F Stakeholder planning horizons Families Business Planning Local Gov’t Infrastructure Agriculture

3 “What have you heard from your stakeholders about changes in, or events caused by, Wisconsin's weather?” Most stakeholders (n = 82) talk about the weather About half as many (n = 42) talk about climate change Most stakeholders think about short term weather

4 “Which climate impacts affect your stakeholders?” Percent of all answers ( n=912) Drought periods in late summer Increased duration and intensity of heat waves Long periods of extreme cold More precipitation in fall, winter and spring Warm, wet winters w/frequent ice storms Stakeholders are most concerned about extreme weather

5 Increasing trend in extreme summer rainfall accounts for recent increase in EWI - Steven Vavrus

6 Upper Midwest Temperature Trends 1910-2012 7 of 10 of the hottest years for daily high temperature have occurred since 1987

7 Projected change in annual peak temperatures 1980-2055 (SRES A1B) +10-25 days >90⁰F +0-5 days >100⁰F Heat waves are projected to increase in number and duration

8 1976, 2012 record Projected (A1B) Likelihood of the Warmest Day of the Year Madison, WI

9 Increase in number and duration of heat waves 2046-2065 1981-2000 vs. 2046-2065 More frequent and longer

10 Upper Midwest Precipitation Trends 1910 - 2012 8 of 10 of the wettest years for daily precipitation have occurred since 1978

11 Annual Average Precipitation Change Wisconsin rainfall has changed ↑7” - ↓4” since 1950

12 National Trends in Extreme Precipitation 1958 to 2011

13 Rainfall Frequency More storms -Vavrus and Behnke How Often How Much Storm Intensity 1971-2000 vs. 2041-2070 Storm Intensity Heavier rainfall -Vavrus and Behnke How Often How Much

14 Storms of June 1-15, 2008 38 River gauges broke records 810 Square miles of land flooded 161 Communities overflowed 90 million gallons raw sewage 2,500 Drinking water wells tested - 28% contaminated $34M in damage claims paid Source: FEMA, WEM DNR

15 Baraboo Madison Extreme Storm Transposition - Doug Brugger *from 850.1’ NOAA CSI-SARP NA12OAR4310098

16 Transposed Peak Stage: 853.29’ 100 Year Flood Stage: 852.70’ Duration above 100 Year Flood Stage: ~10 Days - Fletcher June 2008 Lake Stage, Transposed Case NOAA CSI-SARP NA12OAR4310098

17 853.29’ peak stage (6” DEM) - Fletcher NOAA CSI-SARP NA12OAR4310098 Mendota

18 853.29’ peak stage (6” DEM) - Fletcher NOAA CSI-SARP NA12OAR4310098 Mendota

19 Tornadic Weather Annual mean = 495, Trend = -0.001/year - Brooks et al, 2014

20 Tornadic Weather Fewer days with tornadoes, but more tornadoes per event - Brooks et al, 2014

21 Extreme Winter Storms - Kunkel et al, 2013 15% increase over 20 th century

22 Winter Snow vs. Winter Rain 1961-2000 vs. 2046-2065 Future Wausau winters more like Milwaukee’s today Winter +20-25% Winter +6-7⁰F

23 Warmer Winters  More freezing rain?  Snow

24 Warmer Winters  More freezing rain?   Snow Melts (rain) Freezes

25 - Houston and Changnon, 2004 Hours of freezing rain per year in the United States 1945-2000 Will frequency move north as winter temperatures increase?

26 More winter/spring precipitation = Increased groundwater recharge Mean Annual Change (mm) Runoff Recharge ET Precipitation Black Earth Creek Watershed 1971-1999 vs 2041-2069 Evan Murdock 45% Winter +20-25% Winter +6-7⁰F

27 Increased recharge = Groundwater flooding Neighborhood Flooding - Spring Green, 2008 Rising water table can result in groundwater contamination Gotkowitz & Liebl, 2013 Hwy V Roadway Flooding - Hwy V, Town of Vienna

28 Climate and Health WI Dept. Health Services - BRACE Project


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