Extreme rainfall events have increased by roughly 30% since 1950 in many regions, according to the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report. A warmer atmosphere holds more moisture, and when that moisture is released, it falls harder and faster than historical norms.
Rainfall intensity measures the maximum amount of precipitation that falls in a single day at a given location. As a key indicator of physical risk, it determines exposure to flash flooding, drainage overwhelm, and surface water damage. Understanding rainfall intensity helps organizations assess how extreme precipitation events may affect their operations, infrastructure, and supply chains.
What Is Rainfall Intensity?
Rainfall intensity refers to the rate at which precipitation falls during an event, typically expressed in millimeters per day (mm/day) for climate risk purposes. Higher rainfall intensity means more water is delivered in a shorter period, exceeding the capacity of natural drainage, soil absorption, and engineered stormwater systems.
A location receiving 150 mm of rain spread evenly over a month faces manageable conditions. The same 150 mm falling in a single day creates flash flooding, road closures, and infrastructure damage. Rainfall intensity captures this distinction by focusing on peak daily precipitation rather than monthly or annual totals.
In climate risk assessment, rainfall intensity is measured using the precipitation variable (pr) from NASA’s NEX-GDDP-CMIP6 climate projections. The metric tracks maximum daily precipitation in mm/day across baseline and future time periods.
How Climate Change Affects Rainfall Intensity
The relationship between warming and rainfall intensity follows the Clausius-Clapeyron equation: for every 1°C of atmospheric warming, the air can hold approximately 7% more water vapor. When conditions trigger rainfall, this additional moisture translates directly into heavier precipitation events.
Three mechanisms amplify rainfall intensity under climate change:
- Increased atmospheric moisture. Warmer oceans evaporate more water, loading the atmosphere with moisture that is available for precipitation events. Tropical and subtropical regions are most affected.
- Stronger convective storms. Higher surface temperatures increase atmospheric instability, producing more intense thunderstorms and cloudbursts. Urban areas experience this as pluvial flooding when stormwater systems cannot keep pace.
- Shifting storm tracks. Changes in jet stream patterns and tropical cyclone behavior alter where extreme rainfall occurs, exposing regions with historically low rainfall to unfamiliar flood risks.
CMIP6 climate models project continued increases in extreme daily rainfall across most regions under both SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5 scenarios through 2050 and beyond.

How Is Rainfall Intensity Risk Assessed?
Rainfall intensity assessment uses NASA NEX-GDDP-CMIP6 precipitation data at approximately 25 km resolution. The core metric is maximum daily precipitation in mm/day, compared across baseline (1980-2014) and future projection periods (2030, 2040, 2050).
Risk ratings follow a 5-tier scale based on peak daily rainfall:
| Risk Rating | Max Daily Precipitation | Typical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Low | Less than 50 mm/day | Normal drainage capacity sufficient |
| Moderate | 50-100 mm/day | Localized surface water accumulation |
| High | 100-150 mm/day | Flash flooding in low-lying areas |
| Severe | 150-200 mm/day | Widespread flooding, infrastructure damage |
| Extreme | Greater than 200 mm/day | Catastrophic flooding, landslide triggers |
Rainfall intensity is one input into multiple related hazards. Extreme rainfall directly feeds into river flood and landslide risk calculations, where terrain modifiers amplify or dampen the flood and slope-failure potential. Platforms like Continuuiti assess rainfall intensity alongside these compound effects for a complete physical climate risk assessment.
How Is Precipitation Changing?
Beyond individual extreme events, overall precipitation patterns are shifting. Climate models project three key changes:
Wet regions get wetter. Tropical and mid-latitude regions that already receive substantial rainfall are projected to see annual totals increase by 5-20% by 2050 under SSP5-8.5. The ratio of future-to-baseline annual precipitation exceeds 1.0 in these areas.
Dry regions get drier. Subtropical dry zones, including the Mediterranean, southern Africa, and parts of Central America, face declining annual precipitation. The precipitation change ratio drops below 1.0, compounding drought and water stress risk in these regions.
Variability increases everywhere. Even where average annual rainfall stays constant, the distribution changes. More rain falls in fewer, more intense events, with longer dry spells between them. Annual averages mask this growing volatility.
Precipitation change is tracked as a ratio comparing future annual precipitation to the baseline period. A ratio of 1.2 means 20% more annual rainfall; a ratio of 0.8 means 20% less. Combined with rainfall intensity data, this reveals both the severity and frequency dimensions of precipitation risk.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is rainfall intensity?
Rainfall intensity is the rate at which precipitation falls during an event, typically measured in millimeters per day. Higher rainfall intensity means more water delivered in a shorter period, increasing the risk of flash flooding, drainage overwhelm, and surface water damage.
How does climate change affect rainfall intensity?
Climate change increases rainfall intensity through the Clausius-Clapeyron relationship: for every 1°C of warming, the atmosphere holds approximately 7% more water vapor. Heavier precipitation events, stronger storms, and shifting storm tracks bring extreme rainfall to new regions.
What is the difference between rainfall intensity and precipitation change?
Rainfall intensity measures peak daily events, while precipitation change measures shifts in total annual rainfall. A region can see heavier daily events while total annual precipitation stays the same or decreases.
How is extreme rainfall risk measured?
Extreme rainfall risk uses NASA NEX-GDDP-CMIP6 precipitation data. Maximum daily precipitation is rated on a 5-tier scale from Low (below 50 mm/day) to Extreme (above 200 mm/day) under multiple emissions scenarios and time horizons.
Rainfall intensity is a direct driver of flash flooding, landslide risk, and infrastructure damage. As the atmosphere warms and precipitation patterns shift, locations with historically manageable rainfall may cross into high-risk categories within a single decade. Integrating rainfall intensity into climate hazard screening identifies where these thresholds are being approached.
