June 8, 2018
University of
Wisconsin-Madison
Some hurricanes are moving
more slowly, spending increased time over land and leading to catastrophic
local rainfall and flooding, according to a new study.
Some hurricanes are moving
more slowly, spending increased time over land and leading to catastrophic
local rainfall and flooding, according to a new study published Wednesday (June
6) in the journal Nature.
While hurricanes batter
coastal regions with destructive wind speeds, study author James Kossin says
the speed at which hurricanes track along their paths -- their translational
speed -- can also play a role in the damage and devastation they cause. Their
movement influences how much rain falls in a given area.
This is especially true as
global temperatures increase.
"Just a 10 percent
slowdown in hurricane translational speed can double the increase in rainfall
totals caused by 1 degree Celsius of global warming," says Kossin, a
researcher at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA)
Center for Weather and Climate. He is based at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison.
The study compared 68 years
(1949-2016) of worldwide hurricane track and intensity data, known as
best-track data, from NOAA to identify changes in translational speeds. It
found that, worldwide, hurricane translational speeds have averaged a 10
percent slowdown in that time.
One recent storm highlights
the potential consequences of this slowing trend. In 2017, Hurricane Harvey
stalled over eastern Texas rather than dissipating over land, as hurricanes
tend to do. It drenched Houston and nearby areas with as much as 50 inches of
rain over several days, shattering historic records and leaving some areas
under several feet of water.
How much hurricanes have
slowed depends on where they occur, Kossin found. "There is regional
variation in the slowdown rates when looking at the 10 percent global average
across the same time frame," he says.
The most significant slowdown,
20 percent, occurred in the Western North Pacific Region, an area that includes
Southeast Asia. Nearby, in the Australian Region, Kossin identified a reduction
of 15 percent. In the North Atlantic Region, which includes the U.S., Kossin
found a 6 percent slowdown in the speeds at which hurricanes move.
When further isolating the
analysis to hurricane speeds over land, where their impact is greatest, Kossin
found that slowdown rates can be even greater. Hurricanes over land in the
North Atlantic have slowed by as much as 20 percent, and those in the Western
North Pacific as much as 30 percent.
Kossin attributes this, in
part, to the effects of climate change, amplified by human activity. Hurricanes
move from place to place based on the strength of environmental steering winds
that push them along. But as the Earth's atmosphere warms, these winds may
weaken, particularly in places like the tropics, where hurricanes frequently
occur, leading to slower-moving storms.
Additionally, a warmer
atmosphere can hold more water vapor, potentially increasing the amount of rain
a hurricane can deliver to an area.
The study complements others
that demonstrate climate change is affecting hurricane behavior.
For instance, in 2014, Kossin
showed that hurricanes are reaching their maximum intensities further from the
tropics, shifting toward the poles in both the Northern and Southern
Hemispheres. These shifts can deliver hurricanes to areas -- including some
heavily populated coastal regions -- that have not historically dealt with direct
hits from storms and the devastating losses of life and property that can
result.
Another study, published in
April by researchers at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, used a
modeling approach to look at what would happen to hurricanes under future
climate projections. Using real hurricane data from 2000-2013, the researchers
found future hurricanes will experience a 9 percent slowdown, higher wind
speeds, and produce 24 percent more rainfall.
"The rainfalls associated
with the 'stall' of 2017's Hurricane Harvey in the Houston, Texas, area
provided a dramatic example of the relationship between regional rainfall
amounts and hurricane translation speeds," says Kossin. "In addition
to other factors affecting hurricanes, like intensification and poleward
migration, these slowdowns are likely to make future storms more dangerous and
costly."
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