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New Study Ties Global Warming To Stronger Hurricanes
WASHINGTON (AP) – Most of the increase in ocean temperature that feeds
more intense hurricanes is a result of human-induced global warming, says a study
that one researcher says “closes the loop” between climate change
and powerful storms like Katrina.
A series of studies over the past year or so have shown an increase in the
power of hurricanes in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, a strengthening that
storm
experts say is tied to rising sea-surface temperatures.
And most of that temperature increase can be blamed on global warming caused
by human activities such as automobile and industrial pollution, scientists
report in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“The work that we’ve done kind of closes the loop here,” said
Tom Wigley of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, CO,
a co-author of the paper.
“The important conclusion is that the observed (sea-surface temperature)
increases in these hurricane breeding grounds cannot be explained by natural
processes alone,” said Wigley. “The best explanation for these
changes has to include a large human influence.”
Benjamin Santer of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA,
plus Wigley and their team studied the relationship of climate and hurricanes
using
22 different climate models at 15 institutions around the world.
Climate models are complex sets of mathematical equations that high-speed
computers use to simulate weather and climate and to forecast changes. The
researchers
used them to run 80 different simulations analyzing the response of sea-surface
temperatures to a variety of factors and then compared the results from the
independent models.
While previous studies have looked at entire oceans, this work focused on
the smaller area of the Atlantic and Pacific where tropical storms form.
This study builds a connection between the theoretical foundation of global
warming and changes that are being observed in those areas where hurricanes
are born,
said Robert Corell of the American Meteorological Society, who moderated a
briefing on the work.
While they reported the connection between rising ocean temperatures and
increasing storm power, the researchers declined to predict future changes.
Asked if they would recommend changes in public policy, Greg Holland of the
National Center for Atmospheric Research said, “It is important to note that we’re
not policymakers. Our role is to present the best possible conclusions from
the available evidence.”
Kerry Emanuel, a hurricane expert at Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
added that regardless of global warming, the United States does need to address
problems
in dealing with hurricanes ranging from insurance to disaster response.
Not so sure of the findings was William M. Gray of Colorado State University,
a longtime hurricane expert who issues forecasts each year of the expected
number of storms.
Gray said the models do not deal with all necessary ocean processes and called
the report “a desperate attempt to keep the bandwagon going. They’ve
kept it going with global warming and now they want to keep it going with hurricanes.”
Philip Klotzbach, also of Colorado State, said that “sea-surface temperatures
have certainly warmed over the past century, and that there is probably a human-induced
component.
“To me, the big challenge is still determining what percentage is natural
and what percentage is caused by humans. This paper sheds some light on that
question; however, there is still a considerable amount of uncertainty,” he
said.
Christopher Landsea, a meteorologist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration’s Hurricane Research Division in Miami, praised the new
paper as very well thought out.
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