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International
IPCC report has said it is likely that global warming would make cyclones more intense
A meteorologist tracks Hurricane Gustav at the National Hurricane Center in Miami on Monday. London: Meteorologists are predicting a more active hurricane season than usual this year, but there is no way to know whether global warming has caused an individual event such as a hurricane, or whether it has made such storms worse. On the other hand, some scientists argue that storms such as Gustav are more likely in a warming world, because warmer seas make more powerful storms. If anything, the science has become fuzzier in the years after Hurricane Katrina, with studies suggesting that future storm strength could increase in places but decrease in others — studies seized on by both sides of the debate. Last year’s report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said it was “likely” that global warming would make future cyclones more intense. Studies of hurricane records suggest this trend can already be seen. Some scientists have linked an increasing number of hurricanes in the north Atlantic to global warming. Although, globally the number of tropical storms each year has hovered around 90 over the past century, in the north Atlantic there has been a clear increase. From 1850-1990, the overall average number of tropical storms in the north Atlantic was about 10, including about five hurricanes. Since 1995, the 10-year average has risen, with the 1997-2006 average at about 14, including about eight hurricanes. The IPCC report said this was “more likely than not” down to global warming. A number of factors prevent more definitive conclusions. It is difficult to use climate models to simulate the conditions that allow a hurricane to form. Although sea surface temperature is important, so are other variables, including the difference between the temperature of the sea and air, as well as the formation of high level winds that stop storms developing. It is also unclear how reliably historical records of hurricane strength can be compared, while storm activity in some regions seems to rise and fall in natural cycles over several decades. — © Guardian Newspapers Limited, 2008
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