As temperatures rise worldwide from the effect of greenhouse
gases in the atmosphere, hurricanes may become fewer in number,
according to a paper published this week in the journal Nature
Geoscience
("
Tropical cyclones and climate change," by Thomas R. Knutson
et al). However, the storms that do occur are likely to be more
potent, the paper says. The Washington Post has a summary here
("
Study: Warming to bring stronger hurricanes," by Seth
Borenstein, Associated Press).
The paper's ten authors make up an expert team established
by the World Meteorological Organization to provide advice to
national meteorological and hydrological services on tropical
cyclones and climate change. Their paper is based on an
extensive review of recent research into global warming and
hurricane formation, including studies on past historical storm
records as well as a selection of mathematical models designed
to project future trends.
Although the issue of global warming is politically
contentious, the discussion among experts is less so. Climate
scientists generally agree that the earth's temperature has
been warming over the past century, and that this warming is
driven in large part by "greenhouse gases," such as carbon
dioxide, dumped into the atmosphere by burning of fossil fuels.
But even among scientists who agree on the basics of global
warming, the effect, if any, of this temperature rise on
weather events such as hurricanes remains unclear.
And the Nature Geoscience expert report adds little in the
way of certainty. Hindsight, according to the authors, is less
than 20-20: the available historical data don't clearly show
any link between global warming and hurricanes in the last
century. For one thing, hurricane frequency appears to rise and
fall over many decades in a natural cycle (especially in the
Atlantic basin), making any longer-term warming-related trend
hard to spot even if it does exist, the scientists say. And the
historical storm record is spotty in any case: only recently
have satellite data or extensive ship and airplane records been
available to analyze. So, the paper reports, "it remains
uncertain whether past changes in tropical cyclone activity
have exceeded the variability expected from natural
causes."
What about specific storm effects, such as storm surge
flooding and heavy rainfall? Here again, past history offers no
clear lessons. Theory predicts that warming should lead to
heavier rains, but "a detectable change in
tropical-cyclone-related rainfall has not been established by
existing studies," the paper says. The same goes for storm
surges: "There is no conclusive evidence that any observed
changes in tropical cyclone genesis, tracks, duration and surge
flooding exceed the variability expected from natural causes,"
says the paper, and "a detectable increase in storm-surge
flooding from tropical cyclones has not been established."
What about the future? Here again, the scientists are not
sure. The team reviewed seven different climate models in their
study. However, models that seek to predict global temperature
trends do not themselves model storm patterns. So the
temperature output from the global-warming models has to be fed
into different weather-modeling programs in order to analyze
the possible influence temperature may have on weather events.
And some of these weather models are too coarse, or "low
resolution," to evaluate the likelihood of localized storms
such as hurricanes.
The results can be confusing. When the scientists put
temperature predictions from different global climate models
into any given weather-prediction model, the output is
inconsistent. Even though all the climate models predict a
general rise in temperature, they differ in their small-scale
regional and local temperature projections. And that leads to
differences in the predicted storm events — so that
the final result can be either an increase in storm frequency,
or a decrease, depending on which climate model is used to
provide the input values. Most of the various model
combinations tend to support the paper's general conclusion:
that storms are likely to decrease in number, while increasing
in power. But the uncertainties in the climate models, coupled
with the uncertainties in the storm-simulation models, lead the
scientists to have relatively little confidence in this
composite average prediction. Instead, they fall back on the
familiar phrase: "More research is strongly recommended."
But whether hurricane frequency and the associated wind
speeds and rainfall increase, decrease, or stay the same, the
scientists note, coastal communities will remain vulnerable for
reasons that are independent of weather or climate. "Recent
decades have seen very large increases in the economic damage
and disruption caused by tropical cyclones," they observe.
"Historical analyses indicate that this has been caused
primarily by rising coastal populations and the increasing
value of infrastructure in coastal areas." The authors refer to
a 2008 economic analysis of storm damage
("
Normalized Hurricane Damage in the United States:
1900–2005," by Roger A. Pielke, Jr., et al), which
concludes, "Such growth in vulnerability is expected to
continue for the foreseeable future, in the United States and
around the world, and without effective disaster mitigation
efforts, ever-escalating hurricane damage will be the
inevitable result."