Tropical storms

Hurricane Harvey caused catastrophic flooding in 2017, killing 68 people and costing $125 billion in damages. 100 high-resolution simulations of how tropical cyclones behave in three types of conditions have been conducted – those between 1950 and 2000, those similar to the present and also various future scenarios. Conclusion: as the world warms, there are going to be a lot more slow-moving tropical cyclones like Harvey, according to the models.

Obviously, a slow-moving tropical cyclone dumps far more rain in one place than a fast-moving storm of a similar size and strength. The winds can also do more damage, because they batter structures for longer.

Harvey, for instance, dumped more than a metre of rain in parts of the Houston area. Other recent storms, including Hurricane Florence in 2018 and Hurricane Dorian in 2019 have also been slow-moving, leading to suggestions that climate change is increasing the odds of slow-moving storms. We all get poorer every time a climate disaster strikes.

We have a marked slowdown of storms as the world warms, due to a poleward shift of the mid-latitude westerly winds. It is these prevailing winds that push cyclones along and determine how fast they travel. This increases the risk of storms causing extreme flooding that, among other things, could break dams and spread pollution from factories and farms.

Other studies suggest that warming will lead to tropical cyclones becoming stronger, producing more rainfall, intensifying faster – giving people less time to prepare – and forming in and affecting a wider area than they have previously. (Journal reference: Science Advances, DOI 10.1126/sciadv.aaz7610, Michael Le Page, NewScientist. 11April 2020)

My comment: Now comes news of disappearing beaches in the West Indies as the sea level rises. Most Caribbean islands thrive on tourism. No beaches, no income.

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