Stronger Hurricanes Spawn Bigger Storm Surges
US: August 10, 2006


WASHINGTON - Stronger hurricanes forecast for the next few decades could flood major cities including Miami and New Orleans, environmental scientists said on Wednesday.

 


Storm surges -- walls of water up to 30 feet (9 metres) high pushed ashore by hurricanes -- could pose a higher risk to coastal areas than the threat of rising seas tied to global warming, scientists from the group Environmental Defense said.

More intense hurricanes -- some as strong as 2005's devastating Katrina -- are likely in the future, the scientists said, because global climate change could mean warmer sea surface temperatures, which fuel hurricanes' development.

"There's been a lot of talk about the threat to coastal areas of sea level rise, and that is a very, very real issue ... but one that is going to unfold over a period of decades, if not a century," said Bill Chameides, Environmental Defense's chief scientist, in a telephone news conference.

"What we think will actually be a more immediate risk to coastal areas ... is the threat of storm surge, which is actually exacerbated by sea level rise due to these growing-intensity storms," Chameides said.

Using US government data, the scientists created maps showing flood risk areas in Wilmington, North Carolina; Charleston, South Carolina, and Miami, based on projections of storm surges from hurricanes ranked as Category Three, Category Four and Category Five.


FLOOD RISK

A Category Three storm, with a typical surge of 9 feet (2.7 metres) to 12 feet (3.7 metres) above normal, would pose a flood risk to all of Miami Beach and much of downtown Miami, according to the scientists' projections.

By contrast, a Category Five storm, with surges of 18 feet (5.5 metres) or higher, would pose a risk to a larger area, extending further inland, their maps indicated.

The maps and other information are available online at http://www.environmentaldefense.org/go/hurricanes/.

For New Orleans, the scientists did not project possible risk of flooding; instead, they used data from the US Geological Survey showing how far the flood waters went after devastating Hurricane Katrina came ashore last year.

"As Hurricanes Katrina and Rita showed, the 9,546 square miles (24,720 sq km) of land close to sea level (in Louisiana) are especially vulnerable to storm surges -- highly destructive moving crests of water that often cause the bulk of the damage in a high-category storm," the scientists wrote online.

Chameides agrees with many climate scientists who believe human-caused global warming is responsible for raising sea surface temperatures, making stronger hurricanes more likely; but other scientists maintain hurricane intensity goes in natural cycles, and say the record-breaking 2005 Atlantic and Caribbean season was part of a high-category hurricane cycle.

US government forecasters on Tuesday revised their hurricane predictions for 2006, saying the Atlantic hurricane season would be slightly less intense than last year -- and less active than they predicted in May -- with 12 to 15 named storms and seven to nine hurricanes, of which three or four could be classified as "major" hurricanes.

Last year there were 28 tropical storms, of which 15 became hurricanes, including four major hurricanes, notably Katrina, which devastated New Orleans, killed 1,300 people and caused US$80 billion in damage.

 


Story by Deborah Zabarenko

 


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE