Rainfall analysis of the May 2021 southeastern Texas and southern Louisiana flood

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2024

Abstract

This paper analyzes the heavy rainfall on 16–20 May 2021 across southeastern Texas and southern Louisiana. In Louisiana, five fatalities were attributed to the event and > $1 billion in losses. The rainfall was caused by two slow-moving, mesoscale convective vortices that concentrated precipitation south of Port Arthur, TX, Lake Charles, LA, and Baton Rouge, LA, in 6 to 12-hour periods. Using calibrated radar data, the Storm Precipitation Analysis System estimated 6-h rainfall totals of 254–362 mm south of Lake Charles, surpassing 200–500-year average recurrence intervals (ARI) for those locations, with an isolated area receiving 367.5 mm, equating to a > 800-year ARI. In East Baton Rouge Parish, LA, 203–268 mm was estimated in 6-h (200–500-year ARI), with an isolated area receiving 274 mm, equivalent to a 750-year ARI. A comparison of the May 2021 and August 2016 events, which both affected southern Louisiana, is made using a depth-area-duration analysis. While the forcing mechanisms differed, 1–6 h rainfall depths were similar at 1 –25,900 km2. The May 2021 event exceeded rainfall depths produced by the August 2016 event for 2–6 h durations for area sizes of 1–388 km2, highlighting the precipitation intensity produced by the May 2021 event.

Publication Source (Journal or Book title)

Physical Geography

Number

467

First Page

626

Last Page

649

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