Pacific hurricanes to strengthen as Earth warms


In tropical regions around the world, huge storms form over warm ocean waters. These swirling monstrosities have different names. In the Atlantic, they’re known as hurricanes. In the Pacific, they’re called typhoons or tropical cyclones. These storms can cause massive damage when they travel over land. New research now predicts that typhoons in the Pacific will become even more destructive. That will happen because ocean waters are warming.

The prediction comes from a team led by Wei Mei. He is a climate scientist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, Calif. Mei’s team compared the formation of more than 850 past typhoons. They occurred in the western Pacific Ocean over a 60-year period.

A clear trend emerged. A typhoon’s ultimate intensity depended largely on the temperature of deep seawater. That water churns upward as the storm passes overhead. Slightly warmer waters 50 to 150 meters (160 to 490 feet) deep bolstered the strongest storm seasons.

Projecting this finding into the future, the researchers predict that Pacific warming will strengthen future storms. By the end of the century, the average typhoon’s peak wind speed will increase by 14 percent. Mei’s team published its findings online May 29 in Science Advances.

Hurricanes and typhoons are ranked in terms of the category of their wind speeds. The predicted increase in winds is enough to turn a Category 3 storm into a Category 4, notes Mei. That’s the difference between a storm that is considered “devastating” and one that is “catastrophic.”

Faster winds spell trouble for anyone in a storm’s path, says Kerry Emanuel. He is an atmospheric scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, who was not involved with the research. “A 14 percent increase in wind speed is an almost 50 percent increase in destructiveness,” he notes.

Large storms roil the upper ocean. This churns up deeper seawater. When that water reaches the surface, it largely controls how much heat is available to power a storm. Since the mid-1970s, average typhoon intensity has risen 10 percent. Subsurface waters in that time have warmed about 0.75° Celsius (1.4° Fahrenheit) on average. Climate change is expected to warm these subsurface waters about 1.3 °C more by 2100, the researchers note. As a result, the average peak typhoon wind speed will increase from 198 to 225 kilometers (123 to 140 miles) per hour, Mei and his colleagues now predict.

This isn’t the final word on future typhoon intensity, says Thomas Knutson. He is a climate scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory. It’s in Princeton, N.J. Studies initially predicted that climate change would spur much stronger hurricanes in the Atlantic. But later research cast doubt on those predictions. Interactions between the air and ocean that weren’t important during the last few decades could become more prominent in a warmed world. If that happens, Knutson says, typhoon intensity might lessen instead of increase.

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