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Earth

The New Climate Math on Hurricanes 53

Climate change has intensified hurricane wind speeds by an average of 19 mph in 84% of North Atlantic hurricanes between 2019-2024, according to new research that links warming ocean temperatures to storm intensity for individual hurricanes.

This year, Hurricanes Helene and Milton slammed into Florida, breaking meteorological records and causing catastrophic damage. The study by Climate Central found that higher sea surface temperatures elevated most hurricanes by an entire category on the Saffir-Simpson scale, with three storms, including Hurricane Rafael, seeing wind speeds increase by 34 mph due to warming.

Researchers calculated storm intensity using models of pre-warming ocean temperatures. "It's really the evolution of our science on sea surface temperature attribution that has allowed this work to take place," said lead author Daniel Gilford, noting that hurricane damage increases exponentially with wind speed. For example, a storm with double the wind speed can cause 256 times as much damage. The methodology enables scientists to determine climate change impacts on hurricanes in near-real time.

The New Climate Math on Hurricanes

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  • AFAIK, wind power is proportional to the cube of wind speed. At least this is the way wind generators are designed. So if you double the wind speed, the available energy in theory increases by just sixteen times.
    • AFAIK, wind power is proportional to the cube of wind speed. At least this is the way wind generators are designed. So if you double the wind speed, the available energy in theory increases by just sixteen times.

      Yeah, this seems to be an example of the word "exponentially" to mean "a lot." You see that misusage a lot these days. (And the word "exponentially" is not there in the actual article [iop.org].)

      That factor of 256 would imply that damage goes as the eighth power of wind speed. I find that difficult to believe.

      • by ThosLives ( 686517 ) on Friday November 29, 2024 @01:12PM (#64979693) Journal

        It's monetary damages, not force damage, if you read the references. Also note that as wind speeds go up, you also get more water damage, and because water damage goes with the inundated area, then you can see that you can easily get another nonlinear increase in damage.

      • Regarding damage, that is not that difficult to believe.

        The houses are designed to resist wind speed X.

        They are over engineered to resist 2*X.

        They are not over engineered to resist 8*X.

        So, you have 1000 houses, during X only one gets damaged. With wind power reaching 2*X, 4 or 5 where the "over engineering" was not good enough get damaged.

        And with 8*X wind power: all houses get flattened.

      • When you expand a surface area you literally have an exponential power in the equation.

    • It is a little bit more complicated than that when it comes to storm damage though. Still, even a 10% increase in wind speed can easily hit the safety margins for most buildings.

  • FTA: "Hurricanes—especially landfalling hurricanes with high intensities—can act as 'focusing events' that draw public attention (Birkland 1998, Arnold et al 2021, Silver and Jackson 2023). Increased attention during and in wake of storms creates opportunities for public and private discourse around climate and disaster preparedness (Cody et al 2017, Wong-Parodi and Garfin 2022). Climate change attribution plays an important role in these discussions. Social studies have shown that personal expe

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