Climate MattersNovember 10, 2021

2021 Record Rain Days

2021 Record Rain Days

KEY CONCEPTS

2021's Wettest Day Ranking Map - 2021 Record Rain Days
2021's Wettest Day Ranking Map
Annual Wettest Days - 2021 Record Rain Days
Annual Wettest Days

Some of the heaviest rains have been getting heavier since 1950. 

2021 has been a record-breaking year for extreme rainfall events from coast to coast.

Rising temperatures and extreme rainfall are linked. 

Heavy rains bring many risks, including flooding and mudflows—even in the driest places. 

POTENTIAL LOCAL STORY ANGLES

How vulnerable is your area to flooding? 
Factors like local topography, age of infrastructure, watershed health, and precipitation trends influence flood vulnerability. Access NOAA’s accumulated precipitation plots and precipitation anomaly maps for selected areas of interest. A recent report found that one-fourth of critical infrastructure is put at risk of failure by flooding; the American Society of Civil Engineers grades the integrity of infrastructures by state and category. See current flood risks in your neighborhood with FloodFactor’s zipcode-level risk identifier.

Who is disproportionately impacted by heavy rain-related hazards and why?
Flood risks and impacts are outsized in Black, Brown, Indigenous, and poor communities, especially in rural and Southern regions of the US. Homes in redlined areas have a 25% higher flood risk than in non-redlined areas. Poor homeowners and homeowners of color are priced out of neighborhoods where both housing and municipal flood protections are better maintained. FEMA is less likely to approve aid for homeowners with lower incomes and in nonwhite neighborhoods after floods. When aid is approved, nonwhite homeowners receive less on average than white homeowners in comparable geographic and economic situations. 

What can you do to protect against flooding and extreme precipitation?
Firstly, know your own risk using the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s flood maps. Individual homeowners can insure their homes, maintain rainwater systems, reduce impervious surfaces on their property, elevate important utilities and equipment, and take on low-cost indoor projects recommended by FEMA. Communities can invest in flood management systems, green infrastructure and watershed restoration.

LOCAL EXPERTS 

The SciLine service, 500 Women Scientists or the press offices of local universities may be able to connect you with local scientists who have expertise on CHANGE and climate change. The American Association of State Climatologists is a professional scientific organization composed of all 50 state climatologists. The Association of State Floodplain Managers (ASFPM) has 37 state and regional chapters that can discuss local flood events and policies to mitigate current and future losses from flooding. 

NATIONAL EXPERTS

METHODOLOGY 

Using daily precipitation data from the Applied Climate Information System, Climate Central calculated the annual maximum daily (calendar day) precipitation from 1950-2021 (year-to-date through 10/31) for 247 locations. Trends are based on linear regression. While Climate Central's local analyses include 247 stations, for data summaries based on linear trends, only 246 stations are included due to large data gaps in Wheeling, West Virginia.

The national map shows how 2021’s wettest day (year-to-date through 10/31) ranks at over 2500 stations (full station period of record with each needing ≥ 50 years of data) across the contiguous United States.