FAQs about Hurricanes

8. What changes in hurricane activity are expected by the end of the 21st century?

The Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL), which works in cooperation with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and whose mission is “to promote the scientific understanding of climate and its natural and anthropogenic variations and impacts, as well as to improve NOAA predictive capabilities through the development and use of computer models of the Earth System” believes that “anthropogenic warming at the end of the 21st century will probably make tropical cyclones more intense worldwide (from 2 to 11% according to the projections of the model for an IPCC A1B scenario). This change would imply an even greater percentage increase in the destructive potential by storm, if the size of the storms would not be reduced.”

Other sections of Hurricanes

Article

What are hurricanes and how do they relate to global warming

There are mixed views on the relationship between global warming and hurricanes. So far, no evidence has been found to support this relationship. Whenever there is an extraordinary phenomenon that is supposed to be related to climate change, a precedent occurs, often 50, 100 or more years ago, when global warming, the main factor in climate change, was not a issue. However, with the recent Hurricane Irma (Sep-2017), there was a fact that had never happened. For the first time a cyclone acquired category 5 in the Atlantic Ocean, before reaching the Caribbean…

Magazine

Hurricanes, winds that cause great damage

A hurricane is a cyclone of great force that forms a whirlwind and turns in large circles. For a cyclone to be classified as a hurricane it must at least have a rotation speed of 119 km / h or 74 mps. A hurricane usually originates in the tropics and since its formation, in most cases, begins to expand its diameter and speed. Hurricanes are classified according to the Saffir Simpson wind scale, in five categories, mainly according to their speed…

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