Friday, September 3, 2010
Warming makes hurricanes stronger, other effects unclear
Union of Concerned Scientists News Center: Every hurricane season, the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) receives questions about the science linking hurricanes to climate change. In short, global warming is making the ocean warmer, which in turn makes it more likely for hurricanes, when they do form, to become stronger and more destructive. Meanwhile, the link between global warming and the number of hurricanes that form each year remains unclear.
When examining the link between climate change and extreme weather, it is important to bear in mind that each storm is just one data point in Earth’s climate history. Statistically, an individual hurricane is like a single at-bat for a baseball player, while conclusions about how climate change affects hurricanes is like calculating a baseball player’s batting average. Scientists draw meaningful conclusions from analyzing many storms over many decades.
Besides contributing to hurricane intensity, climate change is also causing sea levels to rise. As the ocean warms and expands and as land-based glaciers melt into the ocean, sea level rises and storms reach further inland before dissipating. Higher sea levels give coastal storms a higher starting point when they make landfall, especially if storms make landfall during high tides. Unless communities improve coastal planning, hurricanes will cause more property damage over time due to the proliferation of public and private development along coastal areas.
Two links between climate change and hurricanes are less clear, however. Scientists aren’t sure how climate change will impact wind shear—the difference in wind speed and direction in a given location.
…Often, people don’t understand that scientists have varying levels of certainty when it comes to different consequences of climate change. Climate contrarians try to take advantage of this knowledge gap when they conflate scientists’ relatively low certainty about how climate change affects hurricanes with their relatively high certainty regarding other, serious consequences of climate change, including sea level rise, long-term drought, reduced crop yields and species extinctions.
Much of the scientific uncertainty regarding climate change and hurricanes has to do with a lack of data. The most accurate hurricane data come from satellites, which have been observing weather for a little more than 30 years. And while pre-satellite data from ships and land-based stations can help scientists understand when hurricanes hit and roughly how powerful they were, those data are not specific enough to allow scientists to draw precise conclusions. Scientists have a less precise, but longer record of hurricane data from the geologic record….
Before the year 2004, only two tropical cyclones had ever been noted in the South Atlantic Basin, and no hurricane. However, a circulation center well off the coast of southern Brazil developed tropical cyclone characteristics and continued to intensify as it moved westward. The system developed an eye and apparently reached hurricane strength on Friday, March 26, before eventually making landfall late on Saturday, March 27, 2004.
The crew of the International Space Station was notified of the cyclone and acquired excellent photographs of the storm just as it made landfall on the southern Brazilian state of Santa Catarina (the storm has been unofficially dubbed “Cyclone Catarina”).
When examining the link between climate change and extreme weather, it is important to bear in mind that each storm is just one data point in Earth’s climate history. Statistically, an individual hurricane is like a single at-bat for a baseball player, while conclusions about how climate change affects hurricanes is like calculating a baseball player’s batting average. Scientists draw meaningful conclusions from analyzing many storms over many decades.
Besides contributing to hurricane intensity, climate change is also causing sea levels to rise. As the ocean warms and expands and as land-based glaciers melt into the ocean, sea level rises and storms reach further inland before dissipating. Higher sea levels give coastal storms a higher starting point when they make landfall, especially if storms make landfall during high tides. Unless communities improve coastal planning, hurricanes will cause more property damage over time due to the proliferation of public and private development along coastal areas.
Two links between climate change and hurricanes are less clear, however. Scientists aren’t sure how climate change will impact wind shear—the difference in wind speed and direction in a given location.
…Often, people don’t understand that scientists have varying levels of certainty when it comes to different consequences of climate change. Climate contrarians try to take advantage of this knowledge gap when they conflate scientists’ relatively low certainty about how climate change affects hurricanes with their relatively high certainty regarding other, serious consequences of climate change, including sea level rise, long-term drought, reduced crop yields and species extinctions.
Much of the scientific uncertainty regarding climate change and hurricanes has to do with a lack of data. The most accurate hurricane data come from satellites, which have been observing weather for a little more than 30 years. And while pre-satellite data from ships and land-based stations can help scientists understand when hurricanes hit and roughly how powerful they were, those data are not specific enough to allow scientists to draw precise conclusions. Scientists have a less precise, but longer record of hurricane data from the geologic record….
Before the year 2004, only two tropical cyclones had ever been noted in the South Atlantic Basin, and no hurricane. However, a circulation center well off the coast of southern Brazil developed tropical cyclone characteristics and continued to intensify as it moved westward. The system developed an eye and apparently reached hurricane strength on Friday, March 26, before eventually making landfall late on Saturday, March 27, 2004.
The crew of the International Space Station was notified of the cyclone and acquired excellent photographs of the storm just as it made landfall on the southern Brazilian state of Santa Catarina (the storm has been unofficially dubbed “Cyclone Catarina”).
Labels:
hurricanes,
science
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2 comments:
Do you how many weather manipulation agencies,private and government are in operation in the U.S. alone????................at least 50
Governmental
* Environment Canada Website
* HAARP Website | Oversight
* Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Website
* NASA: Climate and Radiation Branch - Goddard : Lab for Atmospheres Website
* NASA: Pathfinder Contrail Studies Website
* National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Website
* US Department of Energy (DOE) Website
* US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Website
* US Department of the Interior (DOI): Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) Website
Non-governmental
* Agriculture Defense Coalition Website
* American Geophysical Union (AGU) Website
* The BONNEFIRE Coalition Website
* Clean Air Task Force Website
* Friends of the Earth Website
* GovTrack.us Website
* h.e.s.e. Project - UK Website
* The International Association of Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences (IAMAS) Website
* The International Commission on Atmospheric Chemistry and Global Pollution (CACGP) Website
* National Center for Atmospheric Research Website
* OMB Watch Website
* Organic Consumers Association Website
* Organic Consumers Association All things Canadian
* Union of Concerned Scientists Website
* Polaris Institute Website
* United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Website
* Weather Modification Association Website
* World Meteorology Organization (WMO) Website
“In searching for a new enemy to unite us, we came up with the idea that pollution, the threat of global warming, water shortages, famine and the like would fit the bill.”
– Club of Rome, The First Global Revolution
“It doesn’t matter what is true, it only matters what people believe is true.”
– Paul Watson, co-founder of Greenpeace
“We’ve got to ride this global warming issue. Even if the theory of global warming is wrong, we will be doing the right thing in terms of economic and environmental policy.”
– Timothy Wirth, President of the UN Foundation
“No matter if the science of global warming is all phony, climate change provides the greatest opportunity to bring about justice and equality in the world.”
-Christine Stewart, fmr Canadian Minister of the Environment
Did you know that the U.N. had to put forth anti warfare weather manipulation treaties in the 1970's,it got so bad?????...Do you know they dump aluminum,barium,harmful microbes into hurricanes to increase their power??.
Do you know that they,the Club of Rome admits it is a scam,but people are so stupid,they will believe anything.....why are you proving them right?Do you even know what the club of rome is??
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