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Media
For Immediate Release:
EXPERTS TO WARN GLOBAL WARMING LIKELY TO CONTINUE SPURRING MORE
OUTBREAKS OF INTENSE HURRICANE ACTIVITY
Problem Tied to Rising Sea Temperatures From Trapped Greenhouse
Gases; Trend Portends More Storm Damage Costs for FL, AL, LA, TX,
NC and SC .
WASHINGTON, D.C.//October 21, 2004///With four hurricanes and
tropical storms hitting the United States in a recent five-week
period, 2004 already is being called "The Year of the Hurricane." But
this year's unusually intense period of destructive weather activity
could be a harbinger of what is to come as the effects of global
warming become even more pronounced in future years, according
to leading experts who participated today in a Center for Health
and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School briefing.
The recent onslaught of four major tropical weather disturbances
- Charley, Frances, Ivan and Jeanne - that did so much damage in
the United States and nearby Haiti have spurred new questions about
the relationship between hurricanes and global warming. While experts
can't say that climate change will result in more hurricanes in
the future, there is growing evidence and concern that the tropical
storms that do happen will be more intense than in the past. Fueling
concerns about the link between global warming and hurricanes is
a new study on hurricane intensity published on September 28, 2004
in "The Journal of Climate." The study used extensive
computer modeling to analyze 1,300 future hurricanes and projected
major increase in the intensity and rainfall of hurricanes in coming
decades.
"Global warming may well be causing bigger and more powerful
hurricanes," said James J. McCarthy, a biological oceanographer
at Harvard University and lead author of the climate change impacts
portion of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's (IPCC)
Third Assessment Report (2001). "Warmer seas fuel the large
storms forming over the Atlantic and Pacific, and greater evaporation
generates heavy downpours. With warmer, saltier tropical seas,
the IPCC has projected larger storms, heavier rainfalls and higher
peak winds."
Paul R. Epstein, M.D., associate director of the Center for Health
and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School, said: "Scientists
cannot say at present whether more or fewer hurricanes will occur
in the future. However, even if the number of storms remained constant,
more powerful hurricanes with stronger winds, higher storm surges,
and heavier downpours would have an even greater potential for
damage, including increased risks to human life and public health,
more floods and mudslides, increased coastal erosion and damage
to coastal buildings and infrastructure. This is the pattern that
we already may be seeing related to the overall increase in extremes."
Precipitation from hurricanes also is seen as being likely to
increase,
leading to flooding and mudslides. In addition, hurricane storm
surges could be larger due to sea-level rise from melting ice and
snow and the thermal expansion of ocean waters. In the U.S., the
areas at greatest risk of larger storm surges are low-lying coastal
areas along the Gulf Coast, such as Florida's Panhandle, Alabama's
Gulf Shores and southern Louisiana. More intense hurricane activity
also poses a risk to such vulnerable sections of the United States
as North Carolina and South Carolina.
How would global warming increase the intensity of hurricanes?
One of the consequences of global warming appears to be not only
an increase in sea surface temperature, but a rising of the overall
energy flux at the tropical ocean surface. Some experts think that
this increased surface disequilibrium may lead to more intense
tropical storms. In the Pacific, a large ocean water area two degrees
warmer than average spawned 20 typhoons this season. Eight hit
Japan and meteorologists there have openly attributed that nation's
battering to global warming.
"Human activities are changing the composition of the atmosphere
and global warming is happening as a result," says Kevin Trenberth,
head of the Climate Analysis Section at NCAR and a convening lead
author of the 2007 IPCC report for the chapter on observed changes. "Global
warming is manifested in many ways, some unexpected. Sea level
has risen 1.25 inches in the past 10 years as a result of warming
of the oceans and glacier melting. The environment in which hurricanes
form is changing. The result was a hurricane in late March 2004
in the South Atlantic, off the coast of Brazil: the first and only
such hurricane in that region. Several factors go into forming
hurricanes and where they track. But the evidence strongly suggests
more intense storms and risk of greater flooding events, so that
the North Atlantic hurricane season of 2004 may well be a harbinger
of the future."
The insurance industry already is reading the signals. From the
1980s
through the 1990s, damages from catastrophes (primarily weather
extremes) rose exponentially - from $4 to $40 billion annually
(when calculated in 1999 dollars) with about one quarter of that
amount insured. In the 1990s, Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) payouts for disasters quadrupled. Estimates of insured losses
from this year's hurricanes range from $20 to $40 billion.
With the possibility of more problems to come, weather-related
property and casualty costs from extreme events are projected by
the UN to reach $150 billion worldwide this decade. In the US some
companies already have withdrawn coverage from Cape Cod and the
southern coast of Massachusetts. After this brutal hurricane season
in Florida, homes and businesses are likely to face higher deductibles
and part of the burden will fall on taxpayers.
Matthias Weber, senior vice president and chief property underwriter
of the US Direct Americas division of Swiss Re, said: "Not
since 1886 have four hurricanes hit one state in a single season.
This year, 22 percent of Floridians were affected and two million
claims generated by hurricanes and tropical storms. In 2005, we
expect the demand for catastrophe reinsurance to continue to rise.
Over the last 10 years demand has increased about 10 percent per
year."
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