Cities are scrambling to prevent flooding
US cities are working to shore up their flood defenses in the face of climate change, building and upgrading pumps, storm drains, and other infrastructure.
In many cases, their existing systems are aging and built for the climate of the past. And even upgrades can do only so much to mitigate the intense flooding that's becoming more common, leaving cities to come up with other solutions.
Floods have hit New York and Flagstaff, Arizona, in recent weeks. In Germany and Belgium, they have swept away whole towns and left over 1,000 people missing.
Rainfall inundated Detroit during a recent June storm, flooding streets and houses and overwhelming the local stormwater systems. The city received over 23,000 reports of damage, and local news reported gutted basements and cars swept away in water.
We've never experienced anything like this," said Sue McCormick, the CEO of the Great Lakes Water Authority, in a press conference after the storm. The water authority runs wastewater services for Detroit and the surrounding area.
Urban centers are more prone to flooding than other areas because streets, parking lots, and buildings are impervious, meaning water can't seep into the ground the way it would in a forest or grassland. Instead, it flows.
Detroit, like many older cities, deals with flowing stormwater by combining it with sewage. This blend is then pumped to treatment plants. During the recent storm, electrical outages and mechanical issues knocked out four of 12 pumps in two major pump stations.
The agency has spent $10 million over the past several years upgrading just these two pump stations, and hundreds of millions more on other improvements. But fully modernizing the sewer system would require building a separate stormwater network at a cost of over $17 billion.
Stormwater infrastructure around the country is aging, and many governments have resorted to Band-Aid solutions instead of building more resilient systems, says Mikhail Chester, an infrastructure and policy researcher at Arizona State University. And mechanical and electrical systems are bound to fail occasionally during major storms, Chester adds.
However, even if the pump stations had worked perfectly, they might not have prevented disastrous flooding.
Outdated modelsDetroit's pumping stations, similar to a lot of stormwater infrastructure, were designed to keep up with a 10-year storm, meaning an amount of rainfall within an hour that has roughly a one in 10 chance of happening in any given year. A 10-year storm in the Detroit area would amount to about 1.7 inches of rainfall in an hour, according to National Weather Service data.
During the June storm, parts of Detroit saw intense levels of rainfall that would be more characteristic of a 1,000-year storm (over 3.7 inches of rain within an hour), far beyond the capacity of the pumping stations, according to the water authority.
But rainfall predictions are based on historical data that might not represent the true odds of major storms, according to Anne Jefferson, a hydrologist at Kent State University. Storms that supposedly have a one in 10 chance of happening in any given year are likely happening more often now because of climate change. And she says few agencies are taking climate change into account in their infrastructure designs.
We're locking ourselves into a past climate," Jefferson says.
Governments hoping to account for climate change when designing infrastructure face uncertainty-should they plan for the best-case emissions scenarios or the worst? And how exactly emissions will affect rainfall is difficult to predict.
Planning for bigger storms is an admirable goal, but it's also costly. Bigger pumps and pipes are more expensive to build and harder to install, says Chester. And price increases aren't linear, he adds-a pump or pipe with double the capacity will be more than double the price in most cases.
Fast forwardCoastal cities face even more dire climate threats, and some are investing aggressively to stave them off. Tampa, Florida, spent $27 million upgrading pump stations and other infrastructure after major floods in 2015 and 2016, according to the Tampa Bay Times. Some of the upgrades appear to be working-this year at least, the city avoided floods during major storms like Hurricane Elsa.
However, the rising seas along Tampa's shoreline may soon cover up the pumps' outlets. If sea levels reach the spot where water is supposed to exit storm pipes, the system won't be able to remove water from the city.
Some cities are looking to install other features, like storm ponds and rain gardens, to help manage urban flooding. Grassy areas like rain gardens can reduce the volume and speed of excess water, Jefferson says. If enough of these facilities are built in the right places, they can help prevent smaller floods, she adds, but like other stormwater infrastructure, they're usually not designed to stop flooding during larger storms.
For the most extreme events, there's not much to do except get out of the way, Jefferson says. Instead of building ever-larger flood-control measures, governments could purchase flood-prone land and either keep it vacant or find appropriate uses for it. Chester points to the Netherlands, where local governments created the Room for the River initiative to increase buffer zones around rivers and change the way flood-prone areas are used. Now farms are sited there instead of homes, and the government compensates farmers if their crops are destroyed by flooding.
While cities can build or upgrade pipes, pumps, and rain gardens, climate change is quickly upending normal conditions, challenging infrastructure that's built to last decades.
Now we've entered into this new paradigm where the environment is changing fast, and our infrastructure is not designed to change quickly," Chester says. Those two things are at odds with each other."