. Earth Science News .




.
CLIMATE SCIENCE
Laying The Blame For Extreme Weather
by Staff Writers
Boulder CO (SPX) Oct 12, 2011

Extreme weather is always possible, after all. But with warmer oceans, such events are easier to create. "We're loading the dice in favor of extreme weather events," said Trenberth. The same goes for droughts and subsequent wild fires. They are the flip-side of the extreme storms in a global atmosphere. While unusually wet monsoons were flooding Pakistan in 2010, the same event helped to block moisture from reaching southern Russia. That led to heat waves and fires. File image courtesy AFP.

Floods, tornadoes, droughts and wildfires: They are all weather-related, but blaming the latest meteorological disaster on climate change has always been a tricky matter that climate scientists have been shy to do.

After all, how can you point to a specific and local event, such as a tornado or dry spell, and say it is caused by something as long-term and huge as global warming?

"That's been the mantra of the community and I think it's wrong," said climate scientist Kevin Trenberth of the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Colorado. Trenberth and other climate scientists will be giving presentations that connect extreme weather over the past decade to climate change at a session of The Geological Society of America meeting in Minneapolis on Tuesday, 11 October 2011.

The session, entitled Extreme Climate and Weather Events: Past, Present and Future, begins with Trenberth's presentation, The Russian Heat Wave and Other Climate Extremes of 2010.

He cautions, however, that the harsh weather certainly didn't stop with 2011 and they all can be traced to the place where global warming stores its heat, year after year: the oceans.

The sea surface temperatures near all the extreme flooding events of 2010 were at record levels, Trenberth explains. That includes the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, N. Atlantic and the Indian Ocean.

"All of the storms are being formed in an environment that is warmer and wetter than before," said Trenberth. "The main thing that has happened with climate change is that you have changed the environment."

Specifically, the waters are about one degree Fahrenheit warmer than pre-1970 values, leading to air that's four percent wetter. All that additional moisture and heat in the air feeds storms. "That's the climate change kicker. It's the extra nudge that indeed makes you break records."

Another way of looking at it is in terms of the odds of extreme weather events. Extreme weather is always possible, after all. But with warmer oceans, such events are easier to create.

"We're loading the dice in favor of extreme weather events," said Trenberth.

The same goes for droughts and subsequent wild fires. They are the flip-side of the extreme storms in a global atmosphere. While unusually wet monsoons were flooding Pakistan in 2010, the same event helped to block moisture from reaching southern Russia. That led to heat waves and fires.

This kind of situation reinforces cyclonic and anticyclonic patterns in the atmosphere which make some areas wetter and others drier and hotter.

"So there are dynamical connections," Trenberth said. "You can't disrupt one part of the atmosphere without getting effects in the whole." And with the history and continued releases of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, plus pollution into the atmosphere, there is no doubt that the system is being disrupted, he said.

Among the other weather extreme talks in the session are Doughts of the Past, Analogues for the Future? by Connie Woodhouse of the University of Arizona; Hurricanes in the Climate System by Kerry Emanuel of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Australia 2001-2010:

A Decade of Climate Extremes and Public Policy Responses by Bradley H. Udall of the University of Colorado; and Extreme Weather Events Resulting From the Cumulative Impacts of Multiple- Storm Sets: Case Study of the 500-Year 1999 Floyd Flood In North Carolina, by Stanley Riggs of East Carolina University.

Session No. 162, Extreme Climate and Weather Events: Past, Present, and Future

Related Links
University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR)
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



CLIMATE SCIENCE
A new leaf turns in carbon science
Canberra, Australia (SPX) Oct 11, 2011
In a paper published in Nature, a team of US, Dutch and Australian scientists have estimated that the global rate of photosynthesis, the chemical process governing the way ocean and land plants absorb and release CO2, occurs 25% faster than previously thought. From analysing more than 30 years of data collected by Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego including air samples coll ... read more


CLIMATE SCIENCE
Japan offers 10,000 free trips to foreigners: report

Twelve dead in China construction site accident

Japan's Ongoing Nuclear Disaster: Radiation Still Leaking, Recovery Still Years Away

Japan starts thyroid tests for Fukushima children

CLIMATE SCIENCE
BlackBerry glitches continue for second day

Bangladesh launches $130 laptop for schools

Boeing and Lion Air Pioneer Precision Satellite Navigation Technology

S. Korea's LG unveils ultra-high-speed smartphone

CLIMATE SCIENCE
'Iron' fist proposed for Miami's giant snail problem

Chilean giant dam row enters Supreme Court

Myanmar seeks to ease Beijing worries over dam

Reefs recovered faster after mass extinction than first thought

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Rising CO2 levels at end of Ice Age not tied to Pacific Ocean

Rising carbon dioxide levels at end of last ice age not tied to Pacific Ocean

Swiss warn of massive ice chunk breaking off glacier

Chinese target Arctic with Iceland land deal: experts

CLIMATE SCIENCE
The establishment of genetically engineered canola populations in the US

Rethinking connection between soil as a carbon reservoir and global warming

China says 100 mln farmers to move to cities by 2020

Fungus could wipe out Philippine bananas: growers

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Underwater eruption prompts evacuation in Canaries

Hurricane targets Mexico on eve of Pan American games

Thailand beefs up airport flood defences

A 3D Look at Philippe Provided Clues of Transition into a Hurricane

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Food crisis looming in Sudan: UN agency

Kenya tries to contact French woman's abductors in Somalia

Berkeley Lab Tests Cookstoves for Haiti

Guyana opposition warns foreign bauxite firms

CLIMATE SCIENCE
In the brain, winning is everywhere

Alzheimer's might be transmissible in similar way as infectious prion diseases

Keeping track of reality

Merkel, rights groups hail Nobel nod to women


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement