
_____
Committee on Modernizing Probable
Maximum Precipitation Estimation
Board on Atmospheric Sciences and
Climate
Water Science and Technology Board
Division on Earth and Life Studies
Consensus Study Report
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Suggested citation: National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2024. Modernizing Probable Maximum Precipitation Estimation. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/27460.
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JAMES SMITH (Chair), Senior Scientist and Professor Emeritus, Princeton University
DANIEL COOLEY, Professor, Colorado State University
JOHN ENGLAND, JR., Lead Civil Engineer, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
EFI FOUFOULA-GEORGIOU, Distinguished Professor and Samueli Endowed Chair, University of California, Irvine
KATHLEEN D. HOLMAN, Meteorologist, Bureau of Reclamation
SHIH-CHIEH KAO, Senior Research Staff, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
RUBY LEUNG, Battelle Fellow, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
ROBERT MASON, Extreme Hydrologic Events Coordinator and Senior Science Advisor for Surface Water, U.S. Geological Survey (Retired as of December 31, 2022)
JOHN NIELSEN-GAMMON, Regents Professor and Texas State Climatologist, Texas A&M University
JAYANTHA OBEYSEKERA, Research Professor, Institute of Environment, Florida International University
CHRISTOPHER PACIOREK, Adjunct Professor, University of California, Berkeley
RUSS SCHUMACHER, Professor and Colorado State Climatologist, Colorado State University
STEVEN STICHTER, Study Director, Senior Program Officer, Board on Atmospheric Sciences and Climate (BASC)
JONATHAN M. TUCKER, Program Officer, Water Science and Technology Board (WSTB)
KATRINA HUI, Associate Program Officer, BASC (until June 2023)
HUGH WALPOLE, Associate Program Officer, BASC (until March 2024)
KYLE ALDRIDGE, Senior Program Assistant, BASC (until February 2024)
ANNE MANVILLE, Program Assistant, BASC (February 2024 to present)
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This Consensus Study Report was reviewed in draft form by individuals chosen for their diverse perspectives and technical expertise. The purpose of this independent review is to provide candid and critical comments that will assist the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine in making each published report as sound as possible and to ensure that it meets the institutional standards for quality, objectivity, evidence, and responsiveness to the study charge. The review comments and draft manuscript remain confidential to protect the integrity of the deliberative process.
We thank the following individuals for their review of this report:
FAISAL HOSSAIN, University of Washington
KENNETH KUNKEL, North Carolina State University
VENKATARAMAN LAKSHMI, University of Virginia
BILL McCORMICK, Black & Veatch and ASDSO EPIC Task Group
ANGELINE PENDERGRASS, Cornell University
ANDREAS F. PREIN, National Center for Atmospheric Research
MELVIN SCHAEFER, MGS Engineering Consultants
RICHARD SMITH, University of North Carolina
JEFFREY ULLMAN (NAS, NAE), Stanford University
DANIEL WRIGHT, University of Wisconsin
Although the reviewers listed above provided many constructive comments and suggestions, they were not asked to endorse the conclusions or recommendations of this report nor did they see the final draft before its release. The review of this report was overseen by GEORGE M. HORNBERGER (NAE), Vanderbilt University, and ANA P. BARROS (NAE), University of Illinois. They were responsible for making certain that an independent examination of this report was carried out in accordance with the standards of the National Academies and that all review comments were carefully considered. Responsibility for the final content rests entirely with the authoring committee and the National Academies.
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Many individuals assisted the committee in creating this report. The committee would like to thank the following people who gave presentations, participated in panel discussions, or provided some analysis on the National Inventory of Dams.
Kelcy Adamec, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
Michael Anderson, California Department of Water Resources
Keith Banachowski, Ohio Department of Natural Resources
David Bascom, Federal Emergency Management Agency
Chris Bretherton, University of Washington, Allen Institute for AI
William Collins, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Pierre Gentine, Columbia University
Kevin Griebenow, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
Joseph Kanney, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Bill Kappel, Applied Weather Associates
Kenneth Kunkel, North Carolina State University
Gary Lackmann, North Carolina State University
Kelly Mahoney, NOAA Physical Sciences Laboratory
David Margo, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Bill McCormick, Black & Veatch and ASDSO EPIC Task Group
Daniel McGraw, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
William McKercher, Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality
Zoran Micovic, BC Hydro
Mark Perry, Colorado Dam Safety
Andreas F. Prein, National Center for Atmospheric Research
Michael Pritchard, Nvidia, jointly at University of California, Irvine
Kevin Quinlan, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Kristen Lani Rasmussen, Colorado State University
Kevin A. Reed, Stony Brook University
Alexander Ryzhkov, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, University of Oklahoma
Melvin Schaefer, MGS Engineering Consultants
Christoph Schär, Atmospheric and Climate Science, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
Laura Slivinski, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Amanda Stone, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation
Paul Ullrich, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Michael Wehner, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Daniel Wright, University of Wisconsin
1 NEED AND OPPORTUNITY FOR A MODERNIZED PMP APPROACH
Committee Charge and Statement of Task
PMP Estimates in the United States
Spatial and Temporal Scales for PMP Estimates
PMP and Probable Maximum Floods
3 STATE OF THE SCIENCE AND RECENT ADVANCES IN UNDERSTANDING EXTREME PRECIPITATION
Scientific Advances: Meteorology of Extreme Rainfall
Scientific Advances: Rainfall Data
Numerical Modeling and Computing
4 CRITICAL ASSESSMENT OF CURRENT PMP METHODS
Implications of Climate Change for PMP
Criteria for a Modern PMP Estimation Process
Critical Assessment of Current PMP Methods: Summary
Near-Term Enhancements to PMP Estimation
Bridging Near-Term and Long-Term Strategies
Criteria For Valid/Useful PMP Estimates and Estimation Process
A COMMITTEE MEMBER AND STAFF BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES
2-1 Precipitation Frequency Analysis
2-2 Dam Rehabilitation, Expansion, and Construction
2-3 Risk-Informed Decision Making
2-4 Atmospheric Variables for Estimating Extreme Floods and Probable Maximum Floods
3-2 Generalized Extreme Value and Generalized Pareto Distributions
4-2 Annual Exceedance Probability of PMP
B-2 Summary of Percent Changes in PMP Estimates at 47 Watersheds from HMR 43 to HMR 57
B-3 Summary of Percent Changes in PMP Estimates at 38 Watersheds from HMR 36 to HMR 59
D-1 User Criteria for Valid/Useful PMP Estimates and Estimation Process
S-1 Overview of modernized PMP estimation
2-2 Statewide PMP and precipitation frequency studies for dam safety
2-4 South Carolina rainfall totals for 2–4 October 2015
2-5 Old Mill Pond Dam failure in Lexington, South Carolina, October 2015
2-6 Locations of high-hazard dams
2-7 Locations of currently operable and proposed nuclear reactors
2-8 Example flood hazard curve (maximum reservoir stages) for Lake Okeechobee, Florida
2-14 Diagram of a section showing typical paleoflood features used as paleostage indicators
4-1 Importance of storm transposition and subjectivity: Smethport
4-3 Example dam safety tolerable risk guideline used in RIDM (FEMA, 2015) illustrating risk estimates for four dams, with different overtopping failure probabilities and consequences
5-1 Overview of modernized PMP estimation
5-2 PMP precipitation depth that reflects the new definition
B-1 Conceptual model for PMP based on a convective cell
B-2 Conceptual orographic model for PMP based flow over a ridge
B-3 Conceptual orographic model for PMP based flow over a ridge with discretized pressure layers
B-4 Percent change in 1-hour, 10 mi2 PMP from HMR 55 to HMR 55A at high elevations
C-1 Number of dams listed within each hazard potential classification
C-2 Number of high-hazard potential dams within each state
C-3 High-hazard potential dams by owner type
C-4 Regulators of high-hazard potential dams
C-5 Empirical cumulative distributions of drainage areas, shown by hazard classification
C-6 Median drainage area of high-hazard potential dams for each state
C-8 Drainage areas for four classes of dam heights—high-hazard potential dams
C-9 Primary dam type of high-hazard potential dams
C-10 Median height of high-hazard potential dams in each state
C-11 Dam height and storage relations, shown by primary owner type, for high-hazard potential dams
C-12 Dam height and storage relations, shown by primary dam type, for high-hazard potential dams
| AEP | Annual Exceedance Probability |
| AMS | American Meteorological Society |
| AR | atmospheric river |
| ASDSO | Association of State Dam Safety Officials |
| BAF | Barrier Adjustment Factor |
| C-C | Clausius-Clapeyron |
| CONUS | Continental United States |
| CPM | convection-permitting model |
| CRM | cloud-resolving model |
| DAD | Depth-Area-Duration |
| DDF | Depth-Duration-Frequency |
| DYAMOND | DYnamics of the Atmospheric general circulation Modeled on Nonhydrostatic Domains |
| EVA | extreme value analysis |
| FEMA | Federal Emergency Management Agency |
| FERC | Federal Energy Regulatory Commission |
| GCM | Global Circulation Model |
| GEV | Generalized Extreme Value |
| GIS | Geographic Information System |
| HMR | Hydrometeorological Report |
| IDF | Intensity-Duration-Frequency |
| LES | large-eddy simulation |
| MCS | mesoscale convective system |
| MEP | Model Evaluation Project |
| MPP | Maximum Possible Precipitation |
| MRMS | Multi-Radar Multi-Sensor |
| MTF | Moisture Transposition Factor |
| NEXRAD | Next Generation Weather Radar |
| NID | National Inventory of Dams |
| NOAA | National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration |
| NRC | National Research Council |
| NWP | Numerical Weather Prediction |
| NWS | National Weather Service |
| OTF | Orographic Transposition Factor |
| PFA | Precipitation Frequency Analysis |
| PGW | pseudo-global warming |
| PMF | Probable Maximum Flood |
| PMP | Probable Maximum Precipitation |
| PMS | Probable Maximum Storm |
| PW | precipitable water |
| RIDM | Risk-Informed Decision Making |
| SSM | storm separation method |
| SST | Stochastic Storm Transposition |
| TC | tropical cyclone |
| TVA | Tennessee Valley Authority |
| USACE | U.S. Army Corps of Engineers |
| USBR | U.S. Bureau of Reclamation |
| USGS | U.S. Geological Survey |
| USWB | U.S. Weather Bureau |
| WMO | World Meteorological Organization |