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As Bloomberg Green’s Heat Week coverage continues, we look today at how abnormal Gulf heat and dry soil primed Texas for deadly floods. You can also read this story and keep up with the latest news on the ongoing situation in the state on Bloomberg.com. 

What fueled Texas’ deadly floods

By Brian K Sullivan

In Kerrville, Texas, it only rained five times in June, and July started off with just a couple of showers. In fact, the surrounding county was 100% in drought at the start of July.

Ironically, that drought helped beget the deadly floods that swept through the region on Friday. It’s one of a number of factors, including the abnormally hot Gulf of Mexico, that fueled a storm that killed 27 campers and counselors at Camp Mystic as well as dozens more across Texas.

More than a foot of rain fell on Friday, sending the Guadalupe River and other waterways surging over their banks. While researchers haven’t analyzed the storm that spawned the floods, extreme precipitation is becoming increasingly common as the planet warms.

“One of the clearest fingerprints of the climate crisis is the uptick in heavy rain events, like the one responsible for the tragedy in Texas this week,” said Jennifer Francis, a climate scientist at the Woodwell Climate Research Center. “Texas is particularly flood-prone because the fever-hot Gulf of Mexico is right next door, providing plenty of tropical moisture to fuel storms when they come along.”

Search and rescue workers survey debris following a flash flood in Hunt, Texas, on July 6. Photographer: Jim Vondruska/Getty Images

As climate change warms the world, the atmosphere can hold more moisture. For every 1.8F (1C) increase in temperature, the air can carry about 7% more moisture.

The mechanics are so well-studied, the formula for it has a name: the Clausius-Clapeyron equation, used to calculate the saturation of water vapor pressure to temperature, said Ryan Truchelut, president of commercial forecaster WeatherTiger.

“The carrying capacity increases faster and faster as the temperature increases,” he said.

Read More: Misinformation on Cloud Seeding Swirls After Deadly Texas Floods

But that isn’t the only issue fueling the mechanics of drought and flood. Warmer temperatures lead to more evaporation, particularly over the ocean.

“Human-caused increases in heat-trapping greenhouse gases have warmed oceans, which evaporate more moisture into the warmer air,” Francis said. “Not only does this moisture increase rainfall, but it also fuels stronger storms.”

The floods also got a boost from moisture flowing north from the remnants of Tropical Storm Barry, which had made landfall on Mexico's east coast a week ago, according to the National Weather Service.

In Texas, the situation was also made worse by the drought because dry soils are less able to absorb water when it falls as rain, Truchelut said. Nearly 90% of Kerr County was in either extreme or exceptional drought — the two highest categories on the Drought Monitor’s five-step scale — prior to the storm.

“Nothing is going into the parched dirt,” Truchelut said.

Soil in that area of Texas isn’t known for its water-absorbing qualities even in the best of times, said Tyler Roys, a meteorologist with AccuWeather Inc. When multiple inches of rain fall in an hour, as it did during the storm, “the ground is going to absorb less,” he said.

Read More: Texas Braces for More Heavy Rain as Flooding Death Toll Climbs

While the atmosphere is able to carry 7% more water vapor per 1.8F degree, that translates to a 2% to 3% increase in global average rain and snow, according to a review paper co-authored earlier this year by Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the University of California at Los Angeles.

This means a decrease in the number of light-to-moderate rainy days and an uptick in “the overall number of dry days,” Swain wrote. But at the other end of the spectrum, days with the heaviest rainfall have increased.

“In other words: there’s growing evidence not only that precipitation extremes will increase (in general) due to climate change – but also that the most intense, rarest & most dangerous rain events will increase faster than more ‘moderate’ extremes,” Swain wrote in a post on BlueSky.

A search and rescue team along the Guadalupe River near a damaged building at Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, on July 7. Photographer: Ronaldo Schemidt/AFP/Getty Images

While there are signs that climate change may have contributed to the extreme rainfall in Texas, larger weather patterns that are typical for summer appear to have added to the volatility.

High pressure across the US West and Great Plains led to a dearth of winds aloft to move thunderstorms across Texas, Roys said. That essentially allowed storms to park over the central part of the state, unloading rain over a relatively small geographic area.

The storms — which continued into Monday — were part of a larger pattern that started to draw in moisture from the Gulf as well as all around the region, Truchelut said. This became a large rotating system of storms called a mesoscale convective storm complex, which fed off the warm, moist air.

In the hours before the flood struck, the US Weather Prediction Center sent a series of mesoscale alerts warning rain could fall at rates of 3 inches (7.6 centimeters) per hour or more in the regions west of Interstate 35, which cuts through the heart of Austin.

While natural patterns added to the dangers, Francis noted that cutting emissions would at least lower the risk of human-caused climate change.

“The horrific flooding in Texas is yet another glimpse into our future of more extreme weather, unless we kick our addiction to fossil fuels and stop deforestation,” she said.

Read and share this story on Bloomberg.com. 

Tallying financial costs

$22 billion
Statewide, the flooding may have caused as much as this in total damage and economic loss, according to a preliminary estimate from AccuWeather.

Debunking rumors 

"I understand why emotions are running high and people are scrutinizing cloud seeding to see if it's to blame. Categorically, it's not."
Augustus Doricko
Chief Executive Officer of Rainmaker Technology Corp.
In the aftermath of devastating floods in Texas, social media users have spread misinformation that cloud seeding is to blame. Meteorologists have been quick to debunk the claim, but the rumors underline how weather can be a magnet for conspiracy theories.

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Worth a listen

When the UK handed the Labour party a parliamentary majority last July, it promised to build a new state owned energy company called Great British Energy. It's almost exactly one year since its creation, and GB Energy now has a budget of £5.8 billion to get the organization off the ground. It sounds like a lot of money, but is it? And what exactly will the organization do with all of it? On the latest episode of Zero, Akshat Rathi spoke to Dan McGrail, interim CEO of GB Energy, to find out the answers. Listen now, and subscribe on Apple, Spotify, or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday.

Dan McGrail at the Sustainable Business Summit in London. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe

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