Muscat Daily

Intense hurricanes, extreme weather expected in coming months

- Anadolu Agency

Istanbul, Turkey - As ocean temperatur­es hit new dangerous peaks, experts are warning the unpreceden­ted levels of accumulate­d heat will trigger intense chain reactions, including deadly hurricanes and cyclones, over the coming months.

Recent reports have shown that oceans worldwide are now at their warmest ever.

The EU’S Copernicus Climate Change Service found that sea surface temperatur­es were exceptiona­lly high through most of 2023 and the beginning of 2024. At the end of February 2024, the daily average sea surface temperatur­e reached a new absolute high of 21.09 degrees Celsius (69.962 degrees Fahrenheit).

Climate researcher Leon Simons told Anadolu that the emergence of an El Nino over the Pacific Ocean last year led to increased warming of oceans and the atmosphere, triggering changes in weather patterns.

“With the whole of the Atlantic Ocean record warm, that will increase temperatur­es, especially this year in the coming months … With these higher temperatur­es, hurricanes can get stronger … (and) you can have very heavy flooding like we saw in Libya, Greece and in many parts of the world last year,” he said. The flooding, he explained, is because of increased rainfall, which happens when warm air cools down as it moves over land or especially elevated areas such as mountains.

Another climate researcher Joel Hirschi said temperatur­es in the Atlantic are ‘exceptiona­lly high’. “If these temperatur­es persist later into the year, past May-june into July into the hurricane season, that could favour a very active hurricane season, especially in conjunctio­n with the El Nino that is waning,” he said.

Why oceans getting warmer?

The unpreceden­ted warming of oceans is a combinatio­n of greenhouse emissions, as well as a strong El Nino event that started last year and is still ongoing, said Hirschi, associate head of marine systems modelling at the UK’S National Oceanograp­hy Centre.

The anomalousl­y warm temperatur­es also have to do with atmospheri­c circulatio­n, which is conducive to the developmen­t of ‘marine heat waves’, he said.

For Simons, a key factor apart from greenhouse emissions is the reduction in sulphur emissions, especially from shipping and coal-fired power plants.

“When we reduce air pollution, more sunlight can reach the oceans. The oceans are warming much faster, especially where this air pollution has been reduced in areas where a lot of shipping was happening,” said

Simons, a climate researcher at the Club of Rome Netherland­s.

He said the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on introduced in 2020 new regulation to reduce by 80 per cent the amount of sulphur in fuels used for shipping.

“Because there’s now much less sulphur being emitted, much less sunlight is being reflected by this air pollution to space,” he said, adding that this change has been visibly proven with NASA satellite data.

El Nino-la Nina transition

About the projection­s for coming months, Hirschi said the weakening El Nino will very likely switch to a La Nina.

El Nino and La Nina are both climate phenomena that originate in the Pacific Ocean but can affect weather worldwide.

An El Nino is when warm water builds up and pushes sea surface temperatur­es above average, while La Nina is the complete opposite, when cool water increases and drags down temperatur­es to below the average level.

They are two distinct phases of what is known as the El Nino

Southern Oscillatio­n, or ENSO, and can never occur at the same time.

“It is known that La Nina additional­ly favours conditions that are conducive for the formation of tropical cyclones over the North Atlantic,” said Hirschi.

The areas likely to be impacted are Central American countries such as Belize, Honduras, and Mexico, along with the US, including southern areas like Florida, but also much of the East Coast, he said.

It could also go all the way to Canada and sometimes even curve back toward Europe, he added.

Hirschi said precursor signs of a La Nina event are building up in the Pacific.

“La Nina anomaly phases are when you tend to have droughts over South America and it gets wetter over Australia. So, La

Nina years are favourable for torrential rainfall over Australia and in the regions in the Western Pacific,” he said.

A sort of positive effect of La Nina could be that ocean temperatur­es are expected to fall back a bit below the levels of 2023, he added.

Apart from hurricanes and cyclones, both scientists warned there will be more extreme weather events in the coming months.

One of them will be heat waves, which Hirschi pointed out are now more frequent and intense, with heat records being regularly shattered and not by ‘a few tenths of a degree but sometimes 3, 4 or even 5 degrees’.

Simons called for steps to ‘prepare ourselves for a lot of extreme weather in the months ahead’.

“We should prepare ourselves for a lot of unpredicta­ble extreme weather because we are now in a situation where our planet hasn’t been for millions of years, with greenhouse gas concentrat­ion now higher than it has (ever) been,” he said.

Eyes on the Mediterran­ean

Both Hirschi and Simons pointed out that the Mediterran­ean is another region that is warmer than usual at the moment. The Mediterran­ean had massive heat waves last year, said Hirschi, adding that there have also been ‘severe marine heat waves’ recorded in the region ‘for more than 10 years in a row’.

There are higher chances of ‘medicanes’, he said, referring to a destructiv­e weather phenomenon that scientists have previously warned will increase due to global warming.

The term is a combinatio­n of the words Mediterran­ean and hurricane.

“They’re tropical cyclones, like a hurricane, like storms, that develop over the Mediterran­ean and … can pick moisture and the heat of these warm ocean temperatur­es,” Hirschi explained.

An example was Storm Daniel last year, which severely affected countries like Bulgaria, Greece and especially Libya with tragic consequenc­es, he said.

The reason for the warmer Mediterran­ean over the past few years is the ‘excursion of very warm air from Africa, pushing towards Europe, engulfing the Mediterran­ean’ and forming so-called heat domes that then stayed for a long time, he explained.

Simons said the Mediterran­ean is also seeing the effects of rules enforced to control sulphur emissions.

By May 2025, they will further reduce these sulphur emissions which will cause even more warming, he said.

We should prepare ourselves for a lot of unpredicta­ble extreme weather because we are now in a situation where our planet hasn’t been for millions of years

LEON SIMONS

 ?? ?? At the end of February 2024, the daily average sea surface temperatur­e reached a new absolute high of 21.09 degrees Celsius
At the end of February 2024, the daily average sea surface temperatur­e reached a new absolute high of 21.09 degrees Celsius

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