Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm? The strongest hurricanes are becoming stronger, fueled by warmer oceans caused by climate change
    Dana Nuccitelli      	Wednesday 20 November 2013				00.32 EST 
 
  										  Typhoon Haiyan over the Leyte Gulf, east of the central Philippines. Photograph: Zuma/Rex Features   Typhoon Haiyan may have been   the strongest storm ever recorded; a fact that has triggered an array of stories discussing its possible links to   climate change.
  Global Warming Fuels   HurricanesClimate scientists are confident in   three ways that climate change will make the impacts of hurricanes worse.  First, global warming causes sea level rise, which amplifies storm surges and flooding associated with hurricanes.  As   a paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by Aslak Grinsted and colleagues concluded,
 
 "we  have probably crossed the threshold where Katrina magnitude hurricane  surges are more likely caused by global warming than not."
 
  Second, as climate scientist   Kevin Trenberth has noted,  global warming has also increased the amount of moisture in the air,  causing more rainfall and amplifying flooding during hurricanes.
  Third, warmer oceans are fuel for hurricanes.  Research has shown that   the strongest hurricanes have grown stronger  in most ocean basins around the world over the past several decades,  and climate models consistently project that this trend will continue.     Chris Mooney recently documented the past decade's worth of monster hurricanes around the world, and   Jeff Masters estimates that 6 of the 13 strongest tropical cyclones on record at landfall have happened since 1998.
 
                   			 				The 13 strongest tropical cyclones at landfall.   6 have happened since 1998.  Source: wunderground.com			 What about  Typhoon Intensity Near the Philippines?  Chapter 2.6.3 of the 2013 IPCC report notes, 
 
 "Time  series of cyclone indices such as power dissipation ... show upward  trends in the North Atlantic and weaker upward trends in the western  North Pacific since the late 1970s"
 
  The hurricane intensity trend in the western North Pacific (where the Philippines are located) isn't crystal clear.    One recent paper  finds that over the past few decades their intensity has slightly  fallen (but has grown for the planet as a whole), while others suggest  it's   slightly risen, or that there are   fewer but stronger hurricanes in that western North Pacific region.  
  However,   a paper  published earlier this year in the Proceedings of the National Academy  of Sciences by MIT hurricane expert Kerry Emanuel found that future "Increases in tropical cyclone activity are most prominent in the western North Pacific."   So while we're not certain about the trend over the past few decades,  the evidence indicates that hurricanes near the Philippines will both  become stronger and form more frequently in a warmer world.
  Hurricane  Frequency Used to Sow DoubtThe frequency of hurricane formation overall  is another story.  To this point the evidence does not indicate that  hurricanes are forming or making landfall more often than in the past,  nor are climate scientists confident how global hurricane frequency will  change.  Thus it's not a surprise that climate contrarians have focused  on hurricane frequency while ignoring hurricane intensity.  This is a  clear sign of bias by writers like   the Mail on Sunday's David Rose, who even went as far as to once again repeat the myth of a global warming 'pause' (a myth that was   comprehensively debunked by a new study last week).  
  Similarly, in   a piece  published in The Guardian Political Science section, Roger Pielke Jr.  criticized President Obama, climate scientist Michael Mann, and others  for linking extreme weather to   climate change.  Pielke lamented that those he criticized didn't reference   the 2012 IPCC special report on extreme weather (SREX).  However, Pielke's reading of that report was very selective.
  Climate  Change Intensifies Many Types of Extreme WeatherThe IPCC SREX  emphasizes that hurricane data include significant uncertainties.   However, it's important to note that absence of evidence is not the same  as evidence of absence.  For example the fact that the data aren't good  enough to confidently link rising hurricane intensity to human  greenhouse gas emissions so far doesn't mean there isn't a link.  It  means we need better data to make a conclusive determination.
  However, the report does note that   several types of extreme weather will intensify as climate change continues:
 
 "Heavy rainfalls associated with tropical cyclones are likely to increase with continued warming."
  "Average tropical cyclone maximum wind speed is likely to increase."
  "There is medium confidence that some regions of the world have experienced more intense and longer droughts ... There is medium confidence  that droughts will intensify in the 21st century in some seasons and  areas ... This applies to regions including southern Europe and the  Mediterranean region, central Europe, central North America, Central  America and Mexico, northeast Brazil, and southern Africa."
  "It is virtually certain  that increases in the frequency and magnitude of warm daily temperature  extremes and decreases in cold extremes will occur in the 21st century  at the global scale. It is very likely that the length, frequency, and/or intensity of warm spells or heat waves will increase over most land areas."
 
  When  considering all the available evidence, most of the comments about  climate change and extreme weather criticized by Pielke were on solid  scientific footing.  It's important that we face up to not just the  changes in extreme weather that we've seen so far, but those which are  soon to come if we continue on our current path.  It's not so much the  climate change we've seen so far that we're worried about; it's what's  yet to come.
  What Do We Do About It?Some climate contrarians have  claimed that climate realists are exploiting the victims of Haiyan by  discussing the link between hurricanes and climate change.  But it was  Yeb Saño, the Philippines' lead negotiator to this year's United Nations  climate talks who   pleaded that we stop procrastinating in addressing climate change.
      As Michael Mann noted,  we can't say for sure what impact climate change had on Haiyan because  we only have one planet, and we're running a dangerous experiment with  it.  But it's important to   ask the right questions when it comes to extreme events like Haiyan.  Asking if global warming caused Haiyan is the wrong question.
  Human-caused  climate change makes the impacts of these storms and many other types  of extreme weather worse.  It fuels hurricanes such that we'll see  superstorms like Haiyan more frequently in the future.  Eventually we'll  have to stop denying that reality and start doing something to address  it, or these types of extreme weather events will become the new norm.  theguardian.com   |