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Improving risk estimates for extreme rain and snow

Improving risk estimates for extreme rain and snow
Flooding in lower Mission Valley, San Diego County, February 1980. Credit: County of San Diego, Department of Sanitation and Flood Control

A led by scientists from UC San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography and published in Scientific Reports details an improved method for estimating the likelihood of extreme precipitation events in the western United States.

The traditional approach estimates the frequency of severe rain and snow by analyzing meteorological records looking only at precipitation intensity over arbitrarily defined time periods, such as one hour or 24 hours. The new model—called Trivariate Event Distribution or TED—analyzes by considering consecutive days of rainfall, maximum intensity and total rainfall.

By considering these two additional variables, TED can offer for that would not be considered extreme on the basis of maximum intensity alone. One such event occurred in February 1980, when Southern California experienced damaging floods as a result of sustained, moderate rainfall that in some places lasted more than a week.

In a test of the model's accuracy, the researchers found that TED provided a good statistical fit for the historical weather data for 87% of more than 4,000 weather stations across the western United States. The model's ability to provide a more holistic assessment of extreme rain and snow storm risk could inform infrastructure planning, insurance assessment and emergency preparedness.

More information: Alexander Weyant et al, A holistic stochastic model for precipitation events, Scientific Reports (2025).

Journal information: Scientific Reports

Citation: Improving risk estimates for extreme rain and snow (2025, February 26) retrieved 13 July 2025 from /news/2025-02-extreme.html
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