Managing the effects of extreme sub-daily rainfall and flash floods—a practitioner's perspective

Author:

Dale Murray1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. JBA Consulting, UK

Abstract

Extreme sub-daily rainfall affects flooding in the UK and urban pollution management. Water utilities in the UK need to understand the characteristics of this rainfall, and how it may change in the future in order to plan for and manage these impacts. There is also significant interest from infrastructure owners and urban authorities exposed to flood risk from short-period, intense rainfall events. This paper describes how UK flood risk guidance incorporates allowances for climate change and how recent research using convection-permitting climate models is helping to inform this guidance. The guidance documents are used by engineers and scientists in the modelling of sewer networks, smaller river catchments and urban drainage areas and provide values to ‘uplift' rainfall event data used as model inputs to reflect climate change model projections. With an increasing focus on continuous simulation modelling using time series rainfall, research into adjusting time series data to reflect future rainfall characteristics in convection-permitting climate models is discussed. Other knowledge gaps for practitioners discussed are the potential changing shape (profile) of future rainfall events and future changes in antecedent wetness conditions. The author explains the challenge of developing simple and effective guidance for practitioners from the complex scientific output. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Intensification of short-duration rainfall extremes and implications for flash flood risks’.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,General Mathematics

Reference21 articles.

1. Environment Agency. 2007 Review of 2007 summer floods. Report published December 2017. See https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/292924/geho1107bnmi-e-e.pdf (accessed 22 April 2020).

2. A study of twentieth-century extreme rainfall events in the United Kingdom with implications for forecasting

3. Davies P. 2010 Understanding changing weather patterns. In Presentation made at CIWEM Surface Water Flooding Conf. October 2010 London. London UK: CIWEM.

4. UKWIR. 2019 How do we achieve zero uncontrolled sewer discharges by 2050? Within the publication The big questions facing the water industry. See https://ukwir.org/How-do-we-achieve-zero-uncontrolled-discharges-from-sewers-by-2050 (accessed 10 March 2020).

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