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How Will Climate Change Impact the EPA Region 6 Area?

The EPA Region 6 Area includes Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas.  It is one of the most diverse areas of the U.S. and includes coastal areas, deserts, mountains, and plains and faces unique climate change challenges.

Chapter Eleven of the The IPCC Fourth Assessment ReportExit EPA Disclaimer, Working Group I Report, "The Physical Science Basis," provides general regional climate change projections. It projects the U.S. and Canada will experience changes in climate that include temperature, precipitation, and extreme weather events. On an annual-mean basis, projected surface air temperature warming varies from 2°C to 3°C (3.6 ºF to 5.4 ºF) along the western, southern and eastern continental edges.  For the southwestern U.S., it projects warming is likely to be more significant in the summer (as opposed to being more significant in the winter in the northern areas of the U.S.).  Minimum winter temperatures and maximum summer temperatures are likely to increase more than the global annual mean in the southwest. 

The projected warming is expected to be accompanied by a general increase in precipitation over most of the continent except the most south-westerly part, which includes much of EPA Region 6.  For this part of the U.S., annual mean precipitation is very likely to range from remaining unchanged to slightly decreasing. In general, precipitation is likely to be less frequent but more intense.  Snow season length and snow depth are very likely to decrease in most of North America except in the northernmost part of Canada where maximum snow depth is likely to increase.

These trends are graphically displayed here --> temperature and rainfall maps

Chapter Fourteen of the The IPCC Fourth Assessment ReportExit EPA Disclaimer, Working Group II Report, "Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability," provides some general observations regarding the impacts of climate change to North America.  The U.S. Climate Change Science Program, integrates federal research on climate and global change, as sponsored by thirteen federal agencies and overseen by the Office of Science and Technology Policy, the Council on Environmental Quality, the National Economic Council and the Office of Management and Budget.   It’s reports entitled, “Weather and Climate Extremes in a Changing Climate”Exit EPA Disclaimer and “The Effects of Climate Change on Agriculture, Land Resources, Water Resources, and Biodiversity” Exit EPA Disclaimer note that changes in extreme weather and climate events will have significant impacts and are among the most serious challenges to society in coping with a changing climate.  Together, these reports note the direct effects of climate change – increased surface air temperatures and changes in precipitation, are projected to result in adaptation challenges.  Based on these findings, due to increasing temperatures, faster evaporation rates, and more sustained droughts brought on by climate change, we can expect:


Hurricane photo

New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, courtesy of NOAA



Of particular importance to Region 6, Hurricanes Ivan in 2004, Katrina, Rita and Wilma in 2005, and Ike in 2008 demonstrated that infrastructure along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico can be severely damaged by major hurricanes, which can produce national-level impacts, and require recovery times stretching to months to years. 
The “Weather and Climate Extremes in a Changing Climate” report, discussed above, found evidence for a link between global warming and increased hurricane activity. It concludes, “It is very likely that the human-induced increase in greenhouse gases has contributed to the increase in sea surface temperatures in the hurricane formation regions. Over the past 50 years there has been a strong statistical connection between tropical Atlantic sea surface temperatures and Atlantic hurricane activity.” The IPCC Fourth Assessment Report makes similar findings, as do more recent studies. The National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado, working with federal agencies as well as the insurance and energy industries, has launched an intensive study to examine how global warming will influence hurricanes in the next few decades.


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