November 10, 2012
Shaye Wolf: Climate change feeds today's storms
The Associated Press
Hurricane Sandy fed an unseasonable winter storm that dropped 45 inches of heavy, wet snow in Nicholas County and lesser amounts in various parts of the state. Here, in Elkins on Oct. 30, 18 inches of snow fell. More than 243,000 customers lost power.
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- It was the day the ocean came ashore. As Hurricane Sandy lurched into the East Coast, we watched in horror as floodwaters crippled Manhattan and inundated more than 70 percent of Atlantic City.

This Frankenstorm has given us a hair-raising look at the power of nature -- and the harm and heartbreak it can inflict. But as a scientist, I think it's critical to understand these disasters are becoming more unnatural. The terrifying truth is that we face a future full of Frankenstorms because of manmade climate change.

We've always had hurricanes, of course. But powerful scientific evidence shows that superstorms are being fed by a climate change triple whammy. Global warming, it turns out, is cranking up three key factors that increase America's risk of superstorms and the damage they cause.

First, global warming loads storms with more energy and more rainfall. A new study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that Katrina-magnitude Atlantic hurricanes have been twice as likely in warm years compared with cold years.

That's because hotter ocean temperatures add energy to storms and warmer air holds more moisture, causing storms to dump more rainfall. And global ocean temperatures hit their second-highest level on record in September, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Second, melting sea ice and accelerating Arctic warming are causing changes in the jet stream that have been connected to more extreme weather in the United States. Essentially, climate change in the Arctic is altering the jet stream, causing bursts of colder air to drop down farther into the United States. In Sandy's case, a collision with a cold front acted to turn the hurricane into a superstorm.

Recent research, including studies by experts at the Georgia Institute of Technology and Rutgers University, has linked Arctic warming to increased risk of a variety of extreme weather events. Arctic sea ice, by the way, hit a record low this summer.

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