The Columbus Dispatch

Was tornado outbreak related to climate change?

Scientists still sifting data from changing circumstan­ces

- Suman Naishadham and Seth Borenstein

WASHINGTON – The calendar said December but the warm moist air screamed of springtime. Add an eastbound storm front guided by a La Nina weather pattern into that mismatch and it spawned tornadoes that killed dozens over five U.S. states.

Tornadoes in December are unusual, but not unheard of. But the ferocity and path length of Friday night’s tornadoes likely put them in a category of their own, meteorolog­ists say. One of the twisters – if it is confirmed to have been just one – likely broke a nearly 100-yearold record for how long a tornado stayed on the ground in a path of destructio­n, experts said.

“One word: remarkable; unbelievab­le would be another,” said Northern Illinois University meteorolog­y professor Victor Gensini. “It was really a late spring type of setup in the middle of December.”

Warm weather was a crucial ingredient in this tornado outbreak, but whether climate change is a factor is not quite as clear, meteorolog­ists say.

Scientists say figuring out how climate change is affecting the frequency of tornadoes is complicate­d and their understand­ing is still evolving. But they do say the atmospheri­c conditions that give rise to such outbreaks are intensifyi­ng in the winter as the planet warms. And tornado alley is shifting farther east away from the Kansas-oklahoma area and into states where Friday’s killers hit.

Here’s a look at what’s known about Friday’s tornado outbreak and the role of climate change in such weather events.

Question: What causes a tornado? A: Tornadoes are whirling, vertical air columns that form from thundersto­rms and stretch to the ground. They travel with ferocious speed and lay waste to everything in their path.

Thundersto­rms occur when denser, drier cold air is pushed over warmer, humid air, conditions scientists call atmospheri­c instabilit­y. As that happens, an updraft is created when the warm air rises. When winds vary in speed or direction at different altitudes – a condition known as wind shear – the updraft will start to spin.

These changes in winds produce the spin necessary for a tornado. For especially strong tornadoes, changes are needed in both the wind’s speed and direction.

“When considerab­le variation in wind is found over the lowest few thousand feet of the atmosphere, tornadopro­ducing ‘supercell thundersto­rms’ are possible,” said Paul Markowski, professor of meteorolog­y at Pennsylvan­ia State University. “That’s what we had yesterday.”

There’s usually a lot of wind shear in the winter because of the big difference in temperatur­e and air pressure between the equator and the Arctic, Gensini said.

But usually, there’s not a lot of instabilit­y in the winter that’s needed for tornadoes because the air isn’t as warm and humid, Gensini said. This time there was.

Q: What conditions led to storms of this scale?

A: A few factors, which meteorolog­ists will continue to study.

Spring-like temperatur­es across much of the Midwest and South in December helped bring the warm, moist air that helped form thundersto­rms. Some of this is due to La Nina, which generally brings warmer than normal winter temperatur­es to the Southern U.S. But scientists also expect atypical, warm weather in the winter to become more common as the planet warms.

“The worst-case scenario happened. Warm air in the cold season, middle of the night,” said John Gordon, a National Weather Service meteorolog­ist in Louisville, Kentucky.

Once the storm formed, exceptiona­lly strong wind shear appears to have prevented the tornadoes from dissipatin­g, experts say. Tornadoes are thought to die off when thundersto­rm updrafts lose energy.

Tornadoes typically lose energy in a matter of minutes, but in this case it was hours, Gensini said. That’s partly the reason for the exceptiona­lly long path of Friday’s storm, going more than 200 miles or so, he said. The record was 219 miles and was set by a tornado that struck three states in 1925. Gensini thinks this one will surpass it once meteorolog­ists finish analyzing it.

“In order to get a really long path length, you have to have a really fast moving storm. This storm was moving well over 50 mph for a majority of its life,” Gensini said. That’s not the speed of the winds, but of the overall storm movement.

“You’re talking about highway-speed storm motions,” Gensini said.

Q: How related is climate change to tornado outbreaks?

A: It’s complicate­d. Scientists are still trying to sort out the many conflicting factors about whether human-caused climate change is making tornadoes more common – or even more intense. About 1,200 twisters hit the U.S. each year – though that figure can vary – according to the NOAA National Severe Storms Laboratory. No other country sees as many.

Attributin­g a specific storm like Friday’s to the effects of climate change remains very challengin­g. Less than 10% of severe thundersto­rms produce tornadoes, which makes drawing conclusion­s about climate change and the processes leading up to them tricky, said Harold Brooks, a tornado scientist at the National Severe Storms Laboratory.

Scientists have observed changes taking place to the basic ingredient­s of a thundersto­rm, however, as the planet warms. Gensini says in the aggregate, extreme storms are “becoming more common because we have a lot warmer air masses in the cool season that can support these types of severe weather outbreaks.”

The U.S. is likely to see more tornadoes occur in the winter, Brooks said, as national temperatur­es rise above the long-term average. Fewer events will take place in the summer, he said.

Furtado of the University of Oklahoma said tornado alley, a term used to describe where many twisters hit the U.S., has shifted eastward into the Mississipp­i River Valley. That shift is because of increases in temperatur­e, moisture and shear.

“Bottom line: The people in the Mississipp­i River Valley and Ohio River Valley are becoming increasing­ly vulnerable to more tornadic activity with time,” he said.

NOTE FROM OPINION EDITOR AMELIA ROBINSON: The following two letters are in response to the article “Bill would incentiviz­e college grads to stay in Ohio (Dec. 8).”

GOP’S agenda will keep forcing college students out of state

I agree with the students who pointed out that until the GOP stops pushing their conservati­ve agendas, students will leave the state. In the past, I have advised my adult children to get out and they have.

This is not to say all students want a totally liberal agenda, but many issues such as LGBTQ policies are considered basic human rights and the GOP seems to want to take their rights away.

Young women are not happy with how the GOP wants to control their bodies and ban abortion.

GOP, until you catch up to these students they will run.

Debbie O’brien, Columbus

 ?? HERMENS/LEXINGTON HERALD-LEADER VIA AP RYAN C. ?? In this photo taken by a drone, buildings are demolished in downtown Mayfield, Ky., on Saturday after a tornado traveled through the region Friday night.
HERMENS/LEXINGTON HERALD-LEADER VIA AP RYAN C. In this photo taken by a drone, buildings are demolished in downtown Mayfield, Ky., on Saturday after a tornado traveled through the region Friday night.

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