Current:Home > FinanceGlobal Warming Can Set The Stage for Deadly Tornadoes -Trailblazer Capital Learning
Global Warming Can Set The Stage for Deadly Tornadoes
View
Date:2025-04-15 18:09:00
Adding a grim exclamation point to a year of deadly climate extremes, the early December tornadoes that killed at least 90 people in the Southeast were some of the most intense storms on record so late in the year.
The storms fired up in Arkansas the night of Dec. 10, during weather far too hot and humid for the season, and raced across Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee and Kentucky on Dec. 11. It will take weeks of analyzing data to make final classifications of the tornado outbreak’s intensity. But some of the mega-twisters that destroyed lives, livelihoods and communities may have raked the ground for 250 miles and thrown debris 30,000 feet high into the atmosphere.
So far in 2021, nine severe storm episodes (not just tornadoes) have caused $15 billion in damage and accounted for half of the climate-related events on the federal billion-dollar disaster list. The increasing trend of damages from severe storms has also been tracked by the insurance industry, which shows losses steadily increasing for 40 years.
In 2017, a research meteorologist with Munich Re, a global reinsurance company, wrote in a newsletter that “an increase of atmospheric heat and moisture due to our warming climate will likely increase the number of days per year that are favorable for thunderstorms and their associated hazards, including tornadoes.”
It’s not yet clear if and how global warming fuels individual tornadoes, because they are so small they can’t be reproduced by climate models. But after a Northern Hemisphere summer of floods, droughts, smoky wildfires and heat waves, climate scientists and meteorologists on social media and in broadcast interviews placed the December tornadoes squarely in the context of global warming.
Swiss climate scientist Sonia Seniveratne, an author of the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, noted in a tweet over the weekend that the document “affirms that days with a large number of tornadoes have become more frequent in the US.” A 2014 study showed that clear increase in tornado clustering, climate scientist Zack Labe added, in his own tweet.
More clues to the connection between global warming and tornadoes can be found in research showing that a warmer atmosphere increases the frequency of some upper air wind patterns that favor extremes. After a May 2019 tornado outbreak in the Great Plains, climate scientist Stefan Rahmstorf showed on Twitter how those increasingly persistent loops in hemispheric winds can set up tornado conditions.
The 2014 National Climate Assessment also documented an increase of severe storm frequency, with “new and stronger evidence … that some of these increases are related to human activities,” but some puzzle pieces are still elusive, said Columbia University climate researcher Chiara Lepore, because there is so much natural variability in tornado activity from year to year that it’s hard to find a trend.
Tornadoes, even the biggest ones, are smaller than pinpoints on the global climate scale. “Large scale rainfall events, droughts or hurricanes, are several orders of magnitude bigger and easier to attribute,” she said. “It is reasonable to expect that climate change has and will have some kind of effect on tornado activity. Right now we don’t know how.”
Columbia University researcher Michael Tippett said a deadly 2011 tornado outbreak sparked his research interest, and explained how scientific understanding of tornadoes has increased since then. What seems increasingly certain, as reflected by the IPCC, is that climate change is driving a “creeping increase” in atmospheric conditions conducive to tornado formation, he said.
Scientists also know more about how a cyclical cooling phase of the Pacific Ocean called La Niña drives more frequent tornado outbreaks. Now it’s time to put that all together in the latest climate system models that can analyze all that information with more accurate results, he said.
The recent study he co-authored with Lepore suggests that increases in conditions favorable to breeding severe storms and tornadoes are between 5 and 20 percent for every 1 degree Celsius of warming, “depending on exactly where you are in the world,” he said. “What little confidence we have is toward the frequency side.”
Lepore was a co-author of a study published last month analyzing that trend with the latest climate models that combine more ingredients and can look at smaller scale patterns. She said the findings are in line with previous data that “project increases in frequency in many parts of our planet for conditions conducive to severe weather, especially for the northern hemisphere and northern latitude.” The study doesn’t focus only on tornadoes but includes severe thunderstorm conditions like hail storms and straight line wind storms, she added.
“This work definitely helps to shed some light on the relationship between a warming climate and conditions conducive to severe weather,” she said. “But there is still a gap in our understanding between these projected changes in frequency of severe storm conditions and the realization of these events into actual storms. This gap is still unresolved, I think. We need more research on it.”
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Rob Kardashian Makes Subtle Return to The Kardashians in Honor of Daughter Dream
- New Study Reveals Arctic Ice, Tracked Both Above and Below, Is Freezing Later
- Derailed Train in Ohio Carried Chemical Used to Make PVC, ‘the Worst’ of the Plastics
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Ray Liotta Receives Posthumous 2023 Emmy Nomination Over a Year After His Death
- In a Famed Game Park Near the Foot of Mount Kilimanjaro, the Animals Are Giving Up
- As Enforcement Falls Short, Many Worry That Companies Are Flouting New Mexico’s Landmark Gas Flaring Rules
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- NOAA warns X-class solar flare could hit today, with smaller storms during the week. Here's what to know.
Ranking
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- Apple iPhone from 2007 sells for more than $190,000 at auction
- Lift Your Face in Just 5 Minutes and Save $80 on the NuFace Toning Device on Prime Day 2023
- How RZA Really Feels About Rihanna and A$AP Rocky Naming Their Son After Him
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- What Is Permitting Reform? Here’s a Primer on the Drive to Fast Track Energy Projects—Both Clean and Fossil Fuel
- Director Marcos Colón Takes an Intimate Look at Three Indigenous Leaders’ Fight to Preserve Their Ancestral Connection to Nature in the Amazon
- Why Travis King, the U.S. soldier who crossed into North Korea, may prove to be a nuisance for Kim Jong Un's regime
Recommendation
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
New York City Begins Its Climate Change Reckoning on the Lower East Side, the Hard Way
Megan Fox Covers Up Intimate Brian Austin Green Tattoo
The Surprising History of Climate Change Coverage in College Textbooks
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
Richard Simmons’ Rep Shares Rare Update About Fitness Guru on His 75th Birthday
Supersonic Aviation Program Could Cause ‘Climate Debacle,’ Environmentalists Warn
On the Frontlines in a ‘Cancer Alley,’ Black Women Inspired by Faith Are Powering the Environmental Justice Movement