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Asia's Alarming New Reality: Climate Fuels Deadly Floods
11 Dec
Summary
- Climate change intensified heavy rainfall, increasing flood intensity by up to 160%.
- Cyclone Ditwah and Senyar caused over 1,750 deaths and widespread devastation.
- Deforestation and development in floodplains worsened disaster impacts in Asia.

Deadly cyclones and severe flooding in Asia, which resulted in over 1,750 fatalities, are increasingly linked to the climate crisis. Scientists have determined that human-caused global warming has significantly intensified rainfall, with evidence showing a 28-160% increase in the intensity of heavy rain episodes in areas affected by Cyclone Senyar. Sri Lanka experienced a 9-50% increase in heavy rain intensity.
These events, including Cyclone Ditwah striking Sri Lanka and Cyclone Senyar impacting Sumatra and Malaysia, represent some of the deadliest weather-related disasters in recent history. The analysis by World Weather Attribution underscores that while monsoons are normal, the escalating intensity of these storms is not. Experts attribute this to warmer air holding more moisture, a direct consequence of the 1.3C global warming observed to date.



