Global Warming Doubles Number of Hurricanes, Study Finds
By AFP staffwriters
Global warming’s effect on wind patterns
and sea temperatures have nearly doubled
the number of hurricanes a year in the
Atlantic Ocean over the past century,
says a new study by US scientists.
Excerpts from the study by Greg Holland
of the National Center for Atmospheric
Research and Peter Webster of Georgia
Institute of Technology were released in
the United States late Sunday.
The analysis identifies three periods
since 1900, during which the average
number of hurricanes and tropical storms
increased dramatically and then remained
elevated and relatively steady.
The first period, between 1900 and 1930,
saw an average of six Atlantic tropical
cyclones, of which four were hurricanes
and two were tropical storms — the next
category down.
From 1930 to 1940, the authors point
out, the annual average increased to 10,
consisting of five hurricanes and five
tropical storms.
In the most recent period, from 1995 to
2005, the average reached 15, of which
eight were hurricanes and seven were
tropical storms.
This latter period, Holland and Webster
caution, has not yet stabilized, which
means the average hurricane season may
be more active in the future.
“These numbers are a strong indication
that climate change is a major factor in
the increasing number of Atlantic
hurricanes,” Holland said in a statement.
The scientists see a strong correlation
between the spike in storm activity and
rising sea surface temperatures, which
“feed” hurricanes.
Over the last 100 years, these
temperatures have risen by about 1.3
degrees Fahrenheit, or 0.7 degrees
Celsius, the study asserts.
The temperatures rose approximately 0.7
degrees Fahrenheit, or 0.4 degrees
Celsius, in a period leading up to 1930,
which was marked by some of the
deadliest storms to hit the Atlantic
Coast of the United States.