Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Rapidly-intensifying tropical cyclones likely to increase flood hazard in the North Atlantic as climate warms

02.28.24 | Princeton School of Public and International Affairs

Meta Quest 3 512GB

Meta Quest 3 512GB enables immersive mission planning, terrain rehearsal, and interactive STEM demos with high-resolution mixed-reality experiences.

Many of the most devastating tropical cyclones (TCs) in history, including Hurricanes Andrew (1992) and Katrina (2005), underwent a process known as rapid intensification (RI). Defined by a wind speed increase of at least 30 knots (35 mph) within a 24-hour period, RI can be difficult to predict and can leave coastal regions with little time to prepare for a high-intensity TC, as happened when last summer’s hurricane Otis made landfall at Acapulco.

The historical devastation wrought by TCs that undergo RI has sparked new research into whether climate change will increase the frequency of RI events. However, few studies have examined the degree to which future RI may worsen coastal flooding accompanying TCs. Based on the findings of a new study conducted by Princeton researchers, RI events are already more hazardous than normal TCs and future climate warming causes large increases in the likelihood of RI close to land.

Downscaling synthetic TC data from global climate and hazard models for stormtide and rain, the researchers examined the dangers of rapidly-intensifying TCs under historical (1980-2005) and future (2070-2100) mid-range climate scenarios in the North Atlantic.

The results show that the likelihood of RI happening close to landfall increases from the historical to future scenario, such that the probability of RI within 24 hours of landfall increases from 15% to 28%. In addition to the increases in RI close to landfall, the results suggest historically unprecedented intensity changes by the end of the century, with some modeled TC events having wind intensity changes exceeding 100 knots (115 mph) in 24 hours.

“Many coastal areas now exposed to landfalling TCs are nevertheless rather vulnerable to damages and poorly organized for evacuation,” says C-PREE researcher Michael Oppenheimer. “With such dangerous storms projected to worsen, adaptation planners and emergency managers had better take heed before disaster strikes.”

The researchers also found that RI events are currently more hazardous than normal TCs, producing significantly higher rainfall hazard levels compared to events that have not rapidly intensified. The study also addresses the impact of RI on the 100-year flood events — which are events with a 1% chance to happen in any given year due to heavy rainfall or storm surge or both — finding that events that undergo RI dominate the increasing probability of what is currently a very rare event. Given the occurrence of RI events are projected to rise by 10-30% for each degree of global mean temperature increase, the changing climate will likely lead to more RI TCs and greater flooding potential in the coming years.

“Our findings project a troubling future — with stronger, more frequent and hazardous RI of TCs close to landfall, affording coastal communities limited time to prepare," explains lead author Joseph Lockwood. “This, together with increasing sea levels, implies the need for enhanced focus on refining hurricane intensity forecasts and preparing communities to quickly react to high-intensity hurricanes making landfall.”

Geophysical Research Letters

10.1029/2023GL105624

Computational simulation/modeling

Not applicable

Increasing Flood Hazard Posed by Tropical Cyclone Rapid Intensification in a Changing Climate

28-Feb-2024

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Cara Clase
Princeton School of Public and International Affairs
cara.clase@princeton.edu

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Princeton School of Public and International Affairs. (2024, February 28). Rapidly-intensifying tropical cyclones likely to increase flood hazard in the North Atlantic as climate warms. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8Y47V0OL/rapidly-intensifying-tropical-cyclones-likely-to-increase-flood-hazard-in-the-north-atlantic-as-climate-warms.html
MLA:
"Rapidly-intensifying tropical cyclones likely to increase flood hazard in the North Atlantic as climate warms." Brightsurf News, Feb. 28 2024, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8Y47V0OL/rapidly-intensifying-tropical-cyclones-likely-to-increase-flood-hazard-in-the-north-atlantic-as-climate-warms.html.