Morning Sun

Study: Hurricanes more frequent, destructiv­e

- By Matthew Cappucci and Jason Samenow

The 2021 Atlantic hurricane season ended Tuesday, marking the close of the sixth consecutiv­e above-average season. A study from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology published Thursday offers evidence that there is indeed a long-term trend toward increasing numbers of Atlantic hurricanes.

Hurricanes are the most costly weather disasters for the United States; the damage from the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season, for example, is expected to top $70 billion.

Previous research had suggested a possible increase in Atlantic hurricane intensity in recent decades, tied to human-caused climate change. This study not only supports that, showing storms are becoming more destructiv­e, but also finds that both hurricanes and major hurricanes are increasing in frequency, a more controvers­ial idea.

The study, published in Nature Communicat­ions, was led by MIT atmospheri­c scientist Kerry Emanuel, who employed a novel approach to evaluate past storm activity. Rather than relying on historical observatio­ns, which may have gaps, he performed climate modeling to reconstruc­t a continuous record of hurricane activity over the past 150 years from which to gauge trends.

His approach sidesteps one of the biggest hurdles in long-term hurricane research, which is the incomplete and inconsiste­nt storm observatio­ns available before weather satellites were reliably present beginning around 1970. Before that bookkeepin­g was a bit spotty, especially before the 1940s, when ship reports were a primary source of observatio­n over the open ocean.

Convention­al research on past hurricanes has drawn from a universal database known as the Internatio­nal Best Track Archive, which dates to 1851. The data indicates an increase in hurricane activity since the 19th century, but many atmospheri­c scientists are skeptical that increase is real. They attribute the increase to improved modern surveillan­ce techniques; in other words, they feel that some of the storms that satellites are able to see now were impossible to detect in the past and have published research demonstrat­ing this.

But Emanuel’s modeling results suggest that there is still an increase in Atlantic hurricane frequency.

“The evidence does point, as the original historical record did, to long-term increases in North Atlantic hurricane activity,” he said in a news release.

His technique involves a process known as “dynamical downscalin­g,” akin to the nesting of a high-resolution model simulation within the background of a coarser global model. Emanuel fed his broader model with real-world atmosphere and ocean measuremen­ts and sprinkled the atmosphere with “seeds,” or tropical waves — the precursor to tropical storms and hurricanes.

Climate data, such as sea surface temperatur­es and land-based observatio­ns, are much more readily available than early hurricane reports. That made it possible for Emanuel to pump past climate “reanalysis” informatio­n into his model to reverse-engineer past hurricane seasons.

To ensure consistenc­y of results, Emanuel used three reanalysis data sets and performed the analysis each time.

“There’s been this quite large increase in activity in the Atlantic since the mid19th century, which I didn’t expect to see,” he said of the results.

Emanuel noted that his findings also matched observatio­ns of a “hurricane drought” during the 1970s and 1980s. He believes the culprit was a veil of sulfate aerosols stemming from fossil fuel combustion, which may have spurred a chainreact­ion process that cooled the North Atlantic and reduced storm activity. Hurricanes rely on warm water to develop.

This drought ended shortly after clean-air regulation­s were implemente­d, curbing emissions of these cooling particles. Then ocean temperatur­es began to increase again, and so did hurricane activity.

Emanuel was careful to clarify that, while his results show a noticeable uptick in the frequency of storms, that reasons aren’t clear.

“That is still a mystery, and it bears on the question of how global warming might affect future Atlantic hurricanes,” he said.

Oddly enough, Emanuel’s findings were basin-specific; while the Atlantic exhibited a demonstrab­le spike in hurricane incidence, the rest of the world didn’t adhere to the same trends.

“It’s really the regionalit­y of the climate,” Emanuel said. “It may have been caused by global warming, which is not necessaril­y globally uniform.”

Gabriel Vecchi, a hurricane researcher at Princeton University, who was not involved in the study, expressed some skepticism about the increase in Atlantic storm frequency that Emanuel identified.

“I find these results interestin­g, but I still think they need to be reconciled with a range of other pieces of evidence,” Vecchi wrote in an email.

Vecchi pointed to studies that have shown no increase in Atlantic hurricane activity “once one accounts for changing observing practices.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States