Arab Times

Warming makes Delta and other storms power up faster: experts

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NEW YORK, Oct 12, (AP): Hurricane Delta, gaining strength as it bears down on the US Gulf Coast, is the latest and nastiest in a recent flurry of rapidly intensifyi­ng Atlantic hurricanes that scientists largely blame on global warming.

Earlier, before hitting Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula and temporaril­y losing strength, Delta set a record for going from a 35 mph (56 kph) unnamed tropical depression to a monstrous 140 mph (225 kph) Category 4 storm in just 36 hours, beating a mark set in 2000, according to University of Colorado weather data scientist Sam Lillo.

“We’ve certainly been seeing a lot of that in the last few years,” said National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion climate and hurricane scientist Jim Kossin. “It’s more likely that a storm will rapidly intensify now than it did in the 1980s ... A lot of that has to do with human-caused climate change.”

Over the past couple decades, meteorolog­ists have been increasing­ly worried about storms that just blow up from nothing to a whopper, just like Delta.

They created an official threshold for this dangerous rapid intensific­ation – a storm gaining 35 mph (56 kph) in wind speed in just 24 hours.

Delta is the sixth storm this year and the second in a week to reach the threshold, Lillo calculated.

Hurricanes Hannah, Laura, Sally and Teddy and tropical storm Gamma all gained at least 35 mph (56 kph) in strength in 24 hours. And a seventh storm, Marco, just missed the mark. Laura, which jumped 65 mph (105 kph) in the day before landfall, tied the record for the biggest rapid intensific­ation in the Gulf of Mexico, said former hurricane hunter meteorolog­ist Jeff Masters.

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