Climate change and high exposure increased costs and disruption to lives and livelihoods from flooding associated with exceptionally heavy rainfall in Central Europe
The intensity and duration of the heavy rainfall put immense pressure on civil protection.
Emergency management systems across Europe had been reinforced after severe flooding
over the last decades and largely worked well: despite the higher intensity and larger scale,
the number of fatalities is lower than in earlier floods with 24 estimated at the time of writing,
compared to e.g. 232 in 2002 when flooding affected Germany, Austria, Czechia, Romania,
Slovakia, and Hungary and at least 100 in 1997 when only Germany, Poland and Czechia
were hit by floods. They are also much lower than in the Western European floods in 2021
when over 200 people lost their lives.
● The heavy rainfall was caused by a Vb depression, which forms when cold polar air flows
from the north over the Alps, meeting very warm air in Southern Europe. Vb depressions are
rare, but usually associated with heavy rain over Central Europe. Analysing analogous
weather systems in the observed record suggests that there is no robust change in the number
of analogous Vb depressions since the 1950s.
● The frequency is not the only characteristic of Vb depressions that could potentially change in
a warming climate, other drivers of rainfall can change and affect likelihood and intensity of
the overall rainfall analysed in the remainder of this study. In today’s climate, which is 1.3°C
warmer than at the beginning of the industrial period, a rainfall event of this magnitude is a
very rare event expected to occur about once every 100 to 300 years. As the event is by far the
heaviest ever recorded, the exact return time is difficult to estimate based on only about 100
years of observed data. We use a 100 year return-time for the rest of analysis.
● To assess if human-induced climate change influenced the heavy rainfall, we first determine if
there is a trend in the observations. When looking at the regional-scale described above, the
gridded observational datasets show that heavy four-day rainfall events have become about
twice as likely and 10% more intense since the pre-industrial era. The estimates become more
uncertain when looking at more local scales and can be quite different, and are limited in
places in some of the observed data.
● To quantify the role of human-induced climate change on this increase, we analyse climate
models that are able to simulate heavy rainfall in the area and combine these with the
observation-based assessment. All models show an increase in intensity and likelihood as
well, as expected from physical processes in a warming climate. The combined change,
attributable to human-induced climate change, is roughly a doubling in likelihood and a 7%
increase in intensity. The models are however not explicitly modelling convection, and new
convection-permitting studies have shown that increases in precipitation may have been
underestimated in lower-resolution climate models. Similarly, the gridded observations do not
include the heaviest rainfall. Therefore, these results are conservative.
● Under a future warming scenario where the global temperature is 2°C higher than
pre-industrial levels, climate models predict even heavier 4-day rainfall events, with a further
expected increase of about 5% in rainfall intensity and a further 50% increase in likelihood
compared to present day. Again, these numbers are probably too low, due to the
underestimation of very heavy rainfall in available climate models.
● The areas affected by the floods, notably in sprawling urban centres along major rivers, had
been identified as highly vulnerable to flooding. These regions include Nysa and Wroclaw in
Poland, Bratislava in Slovakia, the eastern regions of Galati and Vaslu in România, lower
Austria and Vienna, as well as Ostrava, Opava, Krnov, Jeseník and Litovel in Czechia.
Infrastructure and emergency management systems built after lessons learned from previous
floods have been severely tested and in many cases overwhelmed by the sheer magnitude and
scale of these floods, leading to damages that are estimated to several billion Euros.
● These floods were well-forecast and the death toll is considerably lower compared to the 1997
and 2002 floods, pointing to the effectiveness of investments made in forecasting, early
warning systems, and forecast-based action including evacuations, flood defences and
pre-emptive water reservoir releases. However, any loss of life underscores the need for
further enhancements to account for climate change in enacting flood defences at scale, and
improving risk communication and emergency response plans