Paris, Oct 31:
Was Hurricane Sandy caused by climate change?
This was the contention today of Andrew Cuomo, governor of New York state, which bore the brunt of the superstorm.
“Anyone who thinks there isn’t a change in weather patterns is denying reality,” he said.
Many
climate scientists would agree with Cuomo when it comes to identifying
the cause of the record-breaking droughts and floods of recent years.
But
when it comes to tropical storms, the experts also say they cannot give
a black-or-white answer for one of the most complex issues in
meteorology.
Tropical storms are fuelled by warm
seas, so intuition says that as ocean temperatures rise, hurricanes —
known as typhoons in Asia — should become more frequent and more brutal.
But
a clear rise in Earth’s surface temperature since the 1970s has so far
failed to engender a similar increase in tropical cyclone numbers, which
have remained stable at about 90 per year.
In the
Atlantic alone, however, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) says major storms have become more frequent and
intense since 1995.
The agency also warns that
science right now cannot tease out how much of the change should be
attributed to natural climate variability, and how much to man-made
warming.
As for the future, experts give conflicting
or sketchy predictions of what could happen this century, when surface
temperatures are predicted to warm two or three degrees Celsius (3.5 to
five degrees Fahrenheit).
“There is some evidence to
suggest that with climate change we might see stronger wind speeds but
that the overall number of tropical cyclones (will show) no change or
maybe even go down a little bit,” said Tom Mitchell, head of climate
change at Britain’s Overseas Development Institute.
Serge
Planton, head of climate research at French weather forecasting service
Meteo France, explained why the picture is so fuzzy. “It’s a very
complex phenomenon,” he said.
“A cyclone depends not
only on the sea surface temperature, but also on the structure of the
winds at every layer of the atmosphere. This means it does not respond
in a simple, linear fashion to climate change.”
When it comes to storm surge, there seems to be more scientific consensus that climate change’s impact is clear.
Sandy’s
swells were entirely consistent with scenarios sketched by the UN’s
Intergovernment Panel on Climate Change in a report on extreme weather
events, published in March, contended Mitchell.
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