After Hurricane Harvey, some Texas residents, politicians and scientists are wondering whether the whole U.S. system for predicting floods is any good.
The storm's deluge
flooded parts of southeast Texas
Standing at a bridge over White Oak Bayou, one of the many streams that crisscross Houston, he points to pink hash mark about 20 feet above the stream bed. "This is how high the water got during Harvey at this location," he says.
Events like these are supposed to be rare, the kind that happen only once each century, or even once every 500 years. Maps developed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and states are supposed to help predict where floods are likely to occur. If you own property inside the mapped flood zone, you usually have to buy flood insurance from FEMA.
But, in Texas, areas way outside of those mapped flood-plains have flooded multiple times in recent years. Before Harvey, there were major floods in the Houston region in both 2015 and 2016.
"You know, we've had three 500 year events in two years," County Judge Ed Emmett, who helps lead recovery efforts as Harris County's chief executive, said at a press conference after Harvey. "Does that mean our definition of a 500 year event is wrong?" Clearly, he added, "we've got to go back and look at what our flood plains are."
Some scientists already have. Flood expert
Samuel Brody
And Harvey
looks just as bad
Scientists in other parts of the country are finding the same thing. In Baton Rouge and Chicago huge numbers of properties outside
FEMA flood zones
In Houston, Brody chiefly blames development for the change in flood patterns. Pavement, rail lines and other structures trap water in a city that's relentlessly flat, he says.
Another problem with Houston's flood maps is that they're out of date. They're based on rainfall data compiled up to 1994, which also inform engineering standards for construction of buildings, roads and bridges — what engineers call "design standards."
Scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration point out that Houston has seen numerous huge storms since the 1990s. Sanja Perica at NOAA's Office of Water Prediction oversees an effort to update the nation's rainfall data using better methods and a longer rainfall history. She has factored in rainfall numbers from those recent storms and found that, for some parts of Texas, rainfall rates in big storms are underestimated.
The updated rainfall estimates, and the new flood maps they will enable, aren't ready for publication yet. But, Perica says, "we looked at preliminary estimates in the Houston area, [and] they will change significantly" when NOAA's new numbers are published.
How significantly? Her team calculates that big storms in Houston actually drop 30 to 40 percent more rainfall than they used to. "A 30 to 40 percent increase in precipitation estimates will probably affect flood estimates as well. A lot." Perica says.
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