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So what happened to the 2007 hurricane season?

Hurricanes this past year were unpredictably ... average

Posted by Joseph Romm (Guest Contributor) at 10:51 AM on 04 Dec 2007

Read more about: climate | severe weather

Lots of experts are weighing in as the Atlantic hurricane season comes to an end (today). One of my favs, Jeff Masters, summarizes it this way:

The Atlantic hurricane season of 2007 is over, and it was a strange one. For the second straight year, we had a near average season, despite pre-season predictions of a very active season.

2007-hurricane.gif

Before going further, I should point out that hurricane forecasting experts tend to be on the wild side. The dean of forecasters, Bill Gray, has become a cranky global warming denier -- you can read his detailed explanation of the 2007 season here (PDF). Masters, on the other hand, flew into hurricanes of his own free will for four years (!), sans parachutes (!!), until he was nearly killed flying into Hurricane Hugo in "the most harrowing flight ever conducted by the NOAA hurricane hunters."

On the more normal side, Chris Mooney, science writer and author of a good recent book on hurricanes and global warming, has his post mortem here.

Now the 2007 season did set a lot of records, as Masters notes:

  1. Hurricane Felix set the Atlantic record for fastest intensification from the first advisory to a Category 5 hurricane. It took Felix just 54 hours to accomplish the feat.
  2. Hurricane Humberto set the Atlantic record for fastest intensification from first advisory issued to hurricane strength -- 18 hours. (Actually, Humberto did the feat in 14 1/4 hours, but this will get rounded off to 18 hours in the final data base, which stores points every six hours). There have been six storms that accomplished the feat in 24 hours.
  3. Hurricane Lorenzo tied the Atlantic record for fastest intensification from a tropical depression to a Category 1 hurricane -- twelve hours.
  4. With the occurrence of Dean and Felix, there have now been eight Category 5 storms in the past five years -- the highest total ever observed over such a short time span.
  5. Dean and Felix both made landfall at Category 5 strength, the first time two storms have done that in a single year.

But why were the pre-season forecasts so wrong? Masters explains:

In June, forecasters gave several reasons to expect a very active season in 2007:
  1. A continuation of conditions since 1995 that have put us in an active hurricane period (in particular, the fact that sea surface temperatures in the Atlantic Main Development Region for hurricanes were about 0.6° C above normal).
  2. The strong likelihood of either neutral or La Nina conditions in the tropical Pacific Ocean, leading to average to below average wind shear conditions.
Well, La Nina conditions did develop, and wind shear gradually declined during the season. Wind shear was slightly above average in August, near average in September, and below average in October over the main development region for hurricane formation. However, sea surface temperatures declined to near average levels by July and August, thanks to a major incursion of African dust. According to the excellent write-up (PDF) of this hurricane season's activity posted by Phil Klotzbach and Bill Gray, 2007 was the dustiest year over the tropical Atlantic since 1999. All this dust acted to block sunlight from reaching the ocean surface, and sea surface temperatures were not able to maintain their above average state. We don't have the ability to predict major dust outbreaks from Africa more than a few days in advance, and this inability will continue to confound efforts at seasonal hurricane prediction for years to come.

The 2007 hurricane season provides no evidence against the theory of human-caused global warming. As we return to normal dust years, expect above-normal hurricane seasons to return.

This post was created for ClimateProgress.org, a project of the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

Good points - funky ending?

I appreciate the insight and yes, Jeff Masters is a great person in addition to making fully known the disappearing ice sheet in the Arctic.  I think the point about hurricanes is that they are by nature chaotic, and it is difficult to predict chaos.  With persistent high pressure cells, such as the one over Australia, we KNOW exactly what is happening and that is statis, a huge area of homogenized air no going anywhere, no rain, and so forth.  Hurricanes, however, are an exception to the rule ... any predictions are simply a form of legalized gambling...

Onward through the fog
And the rest of the world?

The 2007 hurricane season provides no evidence against the theory of human-caused global warming.

Of course not. For a start, this is the 2007 Atlantic hurricane season we're talking about. How about other parts of the world, not affected by dust? Bangladesh and its thousands dead from Cyclone Sidr springs to mind.

If I share initials with 'Global Warming', is that a sign?

Winds

Just because this year's crop of windstorms didn't (like Katrina) target a specific American city doesn't mean next year's hurricanes will be so polite.  The effect on Central America and Mexico earlier may have been downplayed but the damages were just as devastating to the inhabitants and the landscapes there.  And how about the Cook Islands in the Pacific?  How many people read about the five hurricanes that touched down there within ten days?

Des Emery
Models Gone Wild!

As far as the corral of great predictions gone astray, IPCC Doomsday is starting to enter the fold.   My college buddy and I used to joke about everything was irrelevant because the Earth would end in some kind of heat bath...and that was in 1980 when we were bored of one our politics classes!

Oddly enough, I just received an email from him tonight regarding another failed millenarial movement, Ice, The Ultimate Disaster:

http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/stories/2007/12/02 ...

If Georgia writer Richard Noone knew what he was talking about, he'd be dead, and you'd be dead, and the Earth would be one large ice ball hurtling through space.

Like many disaster predictions, Richard Noone's have almost melted into oblivion, but the author says his ideas aren't all wet.

Today, Noone is living in Bayonet Point, Fla., having survived -- along with the rest of us -- his forecast in the book, "5/5/2000 Ice: The Ultimate Disaster" that, on Friday, May 5, 2000, the earth's poles would shift and millions would die as the planet was plunged into another ice age.

His theory -- the result of years of research, and more than a few giant intuitive leaps -- made Noone semi-famous at the turn of the millennium when prognosticators of what will happen next were darlings of a mass media always looking for a fresh hook.

He appeared on "Oprah" and CNN and explained how the catastrophe was predicted in encoded inscriptions in the Great Pyramid of Giza and would be set in motion on May 5 by an extraordinary alignment of the planets.

That alignment would exert such a gravitational pull the ice caps would be torn loose and continents would shift so that people standing in Georgia would find themselves suddenly whipped at 200 miles an hour to another part of the planet such as Nicaragua.

As far-fetched as that sounded then -- and now -- Noone still sticks by the research that went into his book, first published in 1982.

Then of course there was also syzygy.  

One data point

You have to look at the trend. There is no guarantee that each new year will be worse than the last. There should be no need to defend each year. The graphs depiciting the trends need to be defended.

In the end, it all comes down to biodiversity. Poison Darts--Protecting the biodiversity of our world
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