More Climate Changes
Climate change will bring more hurricanes to New York, other midlatitude cities, study finds
·Senior Climate Editor
Mon, January 3, 2022, 1:49 PM
A new study projects that more hurricanes will be coming to midlatitude regions, which include major population centers such as New York, Boston and Shanghai, because of climate change.
The study, published last week in the peer-reviewed British journal Nature Geoscience, finds that tropical cyclones — which are also known as hurricanes or typhoons — will expand from the tropical regions in which they are currently common. Due to global warming, the conditions that create hurricanes will become prevalent farther north in the northern hemisphere and farther south in the southern hemisphere.
Most of the world’s major cities are located in midlatitude regions, meaning that the more widespread hurricanes will have the ability to cause far more damage.
In a press release from Yale University, the article’s lead author, Joshua Studholme, a physicist in Yale’s Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, noted that hurricanes in the 21st century will appear in a wider range of latitudes than they have for the last 3 million years. “This represents an important, under-estimated risk of climate change,” he said.
A hurricane approaches the U.S. (Composite illustration via Getty Images)
The reason for the shift in hurricane latitudes has to do with the global wind pattern known as the Hadley cell, a circulation in which air flows poleward at a height of about 6 to 9 miles but returns toward the equator as it descends toward ground level. One effect of climate change is a decrease in the difference between surface temperatures near or far from the equator. Warming occurs more rapidly at higher latitudes because of feedback loops such as melting sea ice, loss of snow cover, and thawing permafrost, causing even more warming. However, air at higher altitudes actually warms faster in the tropics. Those changes mean the jet stream — which normally prevents hurricanes from flowing farther north in the northern hemisphere — is moving northward, allowing hurricanes to reach higher latitudes.
“Global warming causes the [Hadley] circulation to expand, and with it the jet streams move poleward,” study co-author Kerry Emanuel, a professor of atmospheric science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, told Yahoo News.
Areas in the increasingly at-risk regions have already begun to see some hurricanes make landfall. In 2020, Subtropical Storm Alpha made landfall in Portugal, the first time a subtropical or tropical cyclone had ever hit the Western European nation.
Studholme and colleagues from Yale, MIT, the Shirshov Institute of Oceanology in Russia and the University of Reading in England analyzed mathematical simulations of warmer climates from the Earth’s past and showed that tropical cyclones likely formed in the subtropics. That hasn’t been the case for the last 3 million years but probably will be again in the near future if temperatures continue warming. In addition to the wind damage and heavy rains from hurricanes, the risk of flooding from storm surges will be elevated as sea levels rise due to climate change.
A ship washed ashore by Typhoon Trami in Yonabaru, on the island of Okinawa, Japan, in September 2018. (Kyodo News via Reuters)
“Some of the most populous seaside cities in the world — think New York, Tokyo, Shanghai and so forth — are not deep in the tropics,” Emanuel noted. “They’re a little bit further away. They always have had hurricanes, but very rarely. If they start getting more hurricanes, and if they’re stronger, and if they’re pushing water on top of an already elevated sea level, that’s going to be trouble for them.”
Average global temperatures have risen 1.2 degrees Celsius (2.2 Fahrenheit) in the last 150 years, which is faster than at any other time in recorded history. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the extent to which the Earth warms further in the next 80 years could vary by several degrees, depending on how much greenhouse gases that cause warming are emitted.
“The control over this is the temperature gradient between the tropics and the poles, and that’s very tightly linked to overall climate change,” Studholme told BBC News. “By end of this century, the difference in that gradient between a high emission scenario and a low emission scenario is dramatic. That can be very significant in terms of how these hurricanes play out.”
Comments
"Climate change will bring more hurricanes to New York City..."
So, there's an up side to climate change?
Looking at my 62N latitude and feeling fairly safe here. Oh, and it's supposed to be getting warmer here too.
It's a two-fer!
Great prediction from the climate change nutcakes. Hysteria. Emotions.
If you look at the facts, there have been fewer bad hurricanes since 1972, then there were from 1922 until 1972. In other words, Al Gore et al, Climate Change is causing a decrease in lethal hurricanes. But climate change zombies do not like to look at the facts.
Means less for SC.... but it helps
It will take trillions of dollars, along with copious amounts of male bovine feacal material to control this climate change.
Not one single catastrophe prediction has been right since the 1970s. The climate doom nuts have been wrong every single time. They are currently 44 out of 44 wrong - and counting. See linked story.
https://www.breitbart.com/environment/2019/09/20/nolte-climate-experts-are-0-41-with-their-doomsday-predictions/
They may be wrong, but they don’t let that stop them from profiteering from it!
I have invented a thermostat that plugs into Mother Earth and will control all weather everywhere with my unique remote controller.
I will be requesting a mandatory 10 dollar donation....errr fee from everyone on the planet very shortly and when all the donations are in my bank account, I will take requests from everyone via a lottery system as to what preferred weather you will get.
Of coarse, all of my friends here on GBGD forums will have special privileges. 😁
Of coarse, all of my friends here on GBGD forums will have special privileges.
Will this keep any GBGD folks from having a melt down?