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Global Warming May Play Role in Hurricane Intensity
Live Science ^ | 6/16/05 | Michael Schirber

Posted on 06/16/2005 12:21:50 PM PDT by anniegetyourgun

Climate change could make future hurricanes stronger, but whether the effect is measurable is still a matter of debate. It is also unknown whether it will change the total number of storms.

Kevin Trenberth from the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) claims that warmer oceans and increased moisture could intensify showers and thunderstorms that fuel hurricanes.

"Trends in human-influenced environmental changes are now evident in hurricane regions," Trenberth said. "These changes are expected to affect hurricane intensity and rainfall, but the effect on hurricane numbers remains unclear. The key scientific question is how hurricanes are changing."

Sea-surface temperatures in the tropical North Atlantic – the breeding ground for most U.S. hurricanes – have been the warmest on record over the last decade. Across the globe, the amount of water vapor over the oceans has increased by about 2% since 1988.

Computer models show that these climate changes will push hurricane intensities toward extreme hurricanes, Trenberth said. Moreover, the added moisture in the air will produce heavier rains and increased flooding when the hurricanes make landfall.

There is uncertainty, however, about how well the models account for all the inputs that might affect hurricane strength.

“In the models, an increase in sea surface temperature could make more intense systems,” said Philip Klotzbach, who was not involved in the present work. “But the models do not account for changes in wind patterns that might tend to tear apart hurricanes.”

Klotzbach said that the effect of global warming on hurricanes may end up being small. He said it is hard to notice any difference because the “signal gets swamped by year to year variability.”

According to Chris Landsea of NOAA’s Atlantic Oceanographic & Meteorological Laboratory, there is evidence for natural swings between high and low hurricane activity that extend for 25-40 years.

“The last ten years have been busy for the U.S. – similar to what we experienced between the 1920s and 1960s,” Landsea said.

He thought that global warming could have an impact on hurricanes, but he quoted one study that predicted in 80 years only a five percent change in wind speeds due to increases in heat-trapping greenhouse gases.

“It doesn’t mean there is zero effect,” he said. “But that’s hardly measurable.”

Even with large swings in one region, the total number of big storms across the globe each year does not change by much. Historically, when hurricane activity increased in the Atlantic, there was a corresponding decrease in typhoon activity in the Pacific, and vice versa, so the global hurricane frequency has remained steady over the years.

Klotzbach and William Gray, both of Colorado State University, have made hurricane forecasts for the Atlantic. The current 2005 predictions are 15 named storms (up to the letter ‘M’), of which eight are expected to become hurricanes. Four may become major hurricanes.

Not all of these storms will reach land. Predicting how storms will move is highly uncertain and may have little to do with global warming.

"There is no sound theoretical basis for drawing any conclusions about how anthropogenic climate change affects hurricane numbers or tracks, and thus how many hit land," Trenberth said

In 2004, four hurricanes struck Florida and 10 tropical cyclones or typhoons hit Japan. These unprecedented numbers were at least partly due to large-scale circulation features that drove the events toward land.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: globalwarming; hurricanes; noaa; wereallgonnadie
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To: cubram
>>>"According to some scientists, increased sun spot activity has contributed to global warming"<<<

ANY Layman or better yet... "It is Obvious to the most casual observer that "Global Warming" is a Watermelon Ploy"

The Elephant in the room is "WHY" don't get called on it.

A pothole on a busy street is but an inconvenience to a citizen motorist, to a Politician it is a Vote.
21 posted on 06/16/2005 12:48:27 PM PDT by TexasTransplant (NEMO ME IMPUNE LACESSET)
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To: anniegetyourgun

I'm sure global warming does affect hurricanes, as does global cooling and since the earth is always either warming or cooling, hurricanes are always being affected by one of them.


22 posted on 06/16/2005 1:34:37 PM PDT by Jim_Curtis
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To: anniegetyourgun

Warming may play a role in the crappiest, rainiest, coldest spring in 30 plus years in Northern California (raining today and snowing in the high country....).... Global Warming ... ah, yeah, right! :-)


23 posted on 06/16/2005 1:38:03 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Take Back The GOP!)
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To: Mister Baredog

I think you're on to something there. We are, after all, the source of all evil on the planet....


24 posted on 06/16/2005 1:44:46 PM PDT by anniegetyourgun
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To: cubram

It is partially, but not entirely, correct that no one doubts the fact of warming. No one doubts that the solar cycle has generated a global warming trend for roughly the past two centuries, following the "little ice age" that preceded the modern era, but it is unclear whether that contemporary warming trend has peaked and we are now entering the next cyclical cooling period. We probably will not be in a position to make that judgment for at least several more decades.


25 posted on 06/16/2005 1:51:01 PM PDT by tenuredprof
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To: TGOGary

Algore gave the same speech in Boston on the day that our total snowfall went over nine feet.


26 posted on 06/16/2005 1:58:41 PM PDT by massgopguy (massgopguy)
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To: tenuredprof

Thanks for the clarification.


27 posted on 06/16/2005 2:01:55 PM PDT by cubram
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To: anniegetyourgun
Global Warming May Play Role in Hurricane Intensity

Well thank goodness for that. I thought for a long time it was George Bush's fault.

28 posted on 06/16/2005 2:54:03 PM PDT by boothead
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To: cubram
Yep, I am a sun watcher from way back when, studied the solar wind when no one knew what it was. Currently the sunspot activity is not behaving according to the normal cycle. There were a couple of big sunspots just in the last few days. When the CMEs hit the earth, they heat the atmosphere and warm the Earth up -- A CME just hit on the 16th.

I do notice how the leftist-MSM doesn't bother noting these events at all. Don't want to confuse people.

space weather is the place, SOHO is the tool of choice.
29 posted on 06/16/2005 6:51:29 PM PDT by Tarpon
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