South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Hurricane expert pitches end of wind scale

National Hurricane Conference held in Orlando last week

- By Joe Mario Pedersen Jpedersen@orlandosen­tinel. com

During this week’s National Hurricane Conference in Orlando, a Colorado State University professor proposed a better a way to predict the damages of a devastatin­g hurricane — do away with the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale.

Hurricane specialist, Philip Klotzbach, spoke Tuesday at Orlando’s Rosen Centre hotel about his crusade in doing away with the famous wind scale in favor of measuring surface pressure, the force exerted on the sea surface by the air above, as a better metric to predict hurricane damages.

“Wind hasn’t worked recently,” said Klotzbach, a CSU meteorolog­y professor. “It’s not bad but pressure actually does (predict) better.”

Klotzbach spoke Tuesday to a standing roomonly event during the four-day biannual Orlando conference, which showcases experts, authoritie­s and entreprene­urs from all over the country versed in climatolog­y, emergency management and tropical phenomenon.

His pitch was simple: replace the wind scale for a pressure scale. Klotzbach is not the only person supporting a movement of using pressure over wind, and Tuesday was not the first time the CSU professor pitched the idea. During the 2020 hurricane season, Klotzbach and other meteorolog­ical scholars, published a paper about the subject, but it went largely ignored and overshadow­ed by a storm of a different nature — the COVID-19 pandemic, Klotzbach said.

“Frankly, I think to get attention, we need a large hurricane like a Hurricane Ike, which was a Category

2,” Klotzbach said. “People said, ‘Oh, it’s not a major hurricane, I’m not going anywhere.’ And then, you know, 15-20 feet of storm surge in the Baltimore peninsula, and all those people lost their lives.”

Last week, CSU released its prediction­s for an above-average hurricane season this year predicting

19 named storms.

The Saffir-Simpson scale, which ranks hurricanes based on wind strength from categories 1 through

5, was first made in 1971 by civil engineer Herbert Saffir and meteorolog­ist Robert Simpson, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion. Since then, the scale has become the most used tool in communicat­ing a storm’s strength to the public.

“It became more than just the wind, it became kind of the overall damage that the storm was likely to cause,” Klotzbach said.

Earlier versions of the scale in the ‘70s do incorporat­e central pressure as a metric, but it was removed for reasons that aren’t clear.

The NOAA describes the Saffir-Simpson scale as an example of the types of damages associated with winds, but also acknowledg­e the scale doesn’t address other “potential” impacts for other hurricane-related hits such as storm surge, rainfall-induced floods, and tornadoes.

Understand­ing pressure is crucial to the Klotzbach’s argument. Pressure is what is largely responsibl­e for storm surge — which the National Hurricane Center has said is the most deadly force a hurricane produces. In 2019, the NHC found that most people consider wind to be the greater destructiv­e force in a hurricane’s arsenal, however that isn’t the case, said NHC’s storm surge specialist Cody Fritz.

“Historical­ly, storm surge

has contribute­d to about half of storm-related deaths,” Fritz said.

A study of storm damage between 2007 and 2021 found that Saffir-Simpson scale prediction­s mostly didn’t see much of a consistent relationsh­ip between forecasted wind and excessive hurricane damages, according to CSU. However, CSU found a very strong relationsh­ip between predicted pressure and damages to an area, Klotzbach said.

Consider a tale of two hurricanes: 2004’s Charley and 2005’s Katrina. Both were devastatin­g storms, but measuring the wind speeds before landfall predicted Category 5 Charley as the more threatenin­g storm. Katrina was measured in as a Category 3 storm before landfall.

“But if we look at the pressure for Katrina, it was much lower than for Charlie when it made landfall,” Klotzbach

said. The lower the pressure, the bigger the storm and more widespread its winds tend to reach, which means not only is there a wider coverage of strong winds but also a greater exertion of storm surge.

Hurricane Charley was devastatin­g for Southwest and Central Florida, but the storm only produced about

7 feet of surge. Katrina put New Orleans through 28 feet of storm surge.

“The levees failed in New Orleans and all the damage that caused was devastatin­g, but even had the levees held in New Orleans, we had 200 fatalities in Mississipp­i from storm surge,” Klotzbach said. About 1,800 people in total died because of Katrina. Comparativ­ely, Charley was responsibl­e for

37 deaths. Applying the surface pressure scale to Katrina would have labeled the storm as a Category 5 hurricane, according to Klotzbach. The same could be said for 2012’s Super Storm Sandy, which made landfall in New Jersey as an extratropi­cal storm under the wind scale, but a pressure scale would’ve labeled it as a Category 4 hurricane.

So why do meteorolog­ists include the wind scale in the public forecast? Opposition argue it’s because most people don’t understand what surface pressure is, Klotzbach said.

“But I don’t think most people really understand what wind is either,” he said.

There is misconcept­ion that when a major storm hits an area, anyone in neighborin­g communitie­s would also be encounteri­ng major hurricane winds, said Michael Lindell a professor at the University of Washington. Lindell spoke Tuesday at the Orlando hurricane conference about hurricane risk perception.

“People who are 50 miles up the coast in tropical-storm-force winds might think, ‘Oh I’ve been through a major hurricane and it was no big deal,’ ” Lindall said. “But they haven’t really been through the brunt of the storm ... They misinterpr­eted the experience.”

Risk perception and communicat­ion was big topic at the Orlando hurricane conference — it’s also a big priority for the NHC — but Klotzbach thinks his recommenda­tion of pressure as a public tool is an important way to highlight the danger a resident might face in light of a storm.

“There are other things to worry about besides just the central winds, you know? A larger storms means it’s going to have more storm surge,” he said. “There have been some crazy hurricanes in the past. And if we can prepare from (what we learned) in the past, it will definitely get us better prepared for what we might see in the future.”

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? A Colorado State University professor is suggesting forecaster­s use pressure instead of wind when predicting damage from future storms. Hurricane ida is shown here.
COURTESY PHOTO A Colorado State University professor is suggesting forecaster­s use pressure instead of wind when predicting damage from future storms. Hurricane ida is shown here.

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