Stormwater Featured Articles
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As Heatwaves And Floods Hit Cities Worldwide, These Places Are Pioneering Solutions
1/23/2023
Climate change is going just as badly for cities as we have been warned it would. Extreme weather is increasingly common and severe globally. Australian cities have endured a number of recent disastrous events. It’ll get worse, too. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) fact sheet outlining impacts on human settlements is a very sobering read.
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Flood Forecasts In Real-Time With Block-By-Block Data Could Save Lives — A New Machine Learning Method Makes It Possible
1/19/2023
I am a hydrologist who sometimes works in remote areas, so interpreting weather data and forecast uncertainty is always part of my planning. As someone who once nearly drowned while crossing a flooded river where I shouldn’t have, I am also acutely conscious of the extreme human vulnerability stemming from not knowing exactly where and when a flood will strike.
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Grad Student Reimagines Oklahoma City With Green Infrastructure Design Using InfoDrainage
1/17/2023
Andrea Tavera, a former University of Oklahoma graduate student, used Innovyze drainage design software to promote LID-based, green infrastructure design in hopes of resolving Oklahoma’s two greatest drainage challenges caused by stormwater runoff: excessive flooding and pollution.
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How To Make Stormwater Compliance Accessible
11/30/2022
This article discusses some more common best management practices (BMPs) for reducing stormwater pollution, as well as how businesses can get help with their stormwater management.
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Bridging The Gap: Equitable Investment In City Greenspace
9/27/2022
Every year, an estimated 10 trillion gallons of untreated stormwater runoff containing raw sewage, fertilizer, oil, pesticides, bacteria and other pollutants enter U.S. streams, rivers and oceans from city sewer systems, polluting the environment and drinking water supplies. In many urban and suburban areas, this runoff also causes significant flooding.
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Stanford Researchers Discuss Equity In Storm Planning And Response
9/19/2022
Storms exacerbate inequalities. Increasingly frequent hurricanes and intense precipitation events hit hardest in communities with less ability to afford flood insurance, a higher percentage of homes near industrial plants, and other challenges.
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America's Summer Of Floods: What Cities Can Learn From Today's Climate Crises To Prepare For Tomorrow's
8/26/2022
Floods are complex events, and they are about more than just heavy rain. Each community has its own unique geography and climate that can exacerbate flooding, so preparing to deal with future floods has to be tailored to the community. Recent floods provide case studies that can help cities everywhere manage the increasing risk.
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What Is A Flash Flood? A Civil Engineer Explains
8/8/2022
Flash flooding is a specific type of flooding that occurs in a short time frame after a precipitation event — generally less than six hours. It often is caused by heavy or excessive rainfall and happens in areas near rivers or lakes, but it also can happen in places with no waterbodies nearby.
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Flood Maps Show U.S. Vastly Underestimates Contamination Risk At Old Industrial Sites
8/5/2022
In 2019, researchers at the U.S. GAO investigated climate-related risks at the 1,571 most polluted properties in the country, also known as Superfund sites on the federal National Priorities List. They found an alarming 60% were in locations at risk of climate-related events, including wildfires and flooding. As troubling as those numbers sound, our research shows that that’s just the proverbial tip of the iceberg.
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Climate Change Is Making Flooding Worse: 3 Reasons The World Is Seeing More Record-Breaking Deluges
7/7/2022
Although floods are a natural occurrence, human-caused climate change is making severe flooding events like this more common. In mountainous regions, three effects of climate change in particular are creating higher flood risks: more intense precipitation, shifting snow and rain patterns and the effects of wildfires on the landscape.