• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Hurricane Beryl supercharged by ‘crazy’ ocean temperatures, experts say

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #25
    Hurricanes and Climate Hysteria | Derrick Max The first hurricane of 2024, Hurricane Beryl, is now in the books. Beryl reminded us that hurricanes are a powerful force of nature – a force that clearly causes much fear and anxiety. The stronger and more destructive the hurricane, the deeper it becomes ingrained in our collective consciousness. Katrina, Andrew, Sandy, Harvey – hurricane names that will forever be associated with destruction and death. Sadly, as with most destructive weather events, these events quickly become fodder for climate extremists to tie our fear of these events to “climate change” or more specifically, “man-made climate change.” Beryl is no exception, “Is Hurricane Beryl the sign of another dangerous storm season? Climate change is fueling the frequency and intensity of storms” cried the headline in The Week. Surprisingly, the actual data rarely matches the headline, a fact that seldom gets coverage in the mainstream media. Even government agencies, according to meteorologist and oceanographer Bob Cohen, often lead with alarming statements about increased weather severity, but the data show a different story. The truth is that the number of hurricanes (remaining offshore and making land) impacting the continental United States hasn’t significantly increased over the past century. While Atlantic hurricane formation does exhibit a very slight upward trend recently, the records indicate a peak much earlier, as the graph below shows. Sparsely populated areas in the early 20th century might have missed weaker storms, leading to underestimates. Similarly, the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale used to categorize hurricanes based on sustained wind speed, with higher categories signifying greater destructive potential, also shows a very minimal increase in intensity over the last decade. More importantly, the causes of the modest increases are more complex than climate change – and there is little to no evidence linking the data to “man-made” climate change. There are cycles in ocean temperatures like El Nino and the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) that are not climate change related and can impact hurricane activity. These naturally occurring patterns have an oversized impact on the number of hot days and hurricanes we experience. As can be seen in this University of Arizona chart overlapping AMO phases with hurricane patterns, AMO phases dominate the data.

    [URL=https://x.com/OwenGregorian/status/1811355919336267869/photo/1]Image[/URL]








    Distinguishing long-term trends from natural variability requires a robust dataset – which currently does not exist. Reliable hurricane data with consistent recording methods only extends back to the mid-20th century, and the best records came with the satellites. Earlier records may be incomplete or lack crucial details like wind speed, hindering our ability to conclusively identify trends before this period. While the absolute number of U.S. landfalls might not be skyrocketing as the headlines suggest, several factors heighten the perception of increased hurricane risk which then fuels the climate extremist language. The 24/7 news cycle provides constant updates, amplifying public anxiety. The stronger the storm, the greater the coverage, the greater the sense of heightened danger – the greater the likelihood that it will be falsely attributed to climate change. As noted above, the psychological impact of past devastating hurricanes lingers long after the storm has passed. Events like Hurricane Katrina in 2005, which caused $65 billion in damages and 1,408 deaths, remain etched in our collective memory, shaping the public perception of hurricane risk even though no hurricane since has caused more than 83 deaths. Yet no one mentions that hurricane cost impacts are due primarily to population growth and coastal development. As more people reside in hurricane-prone areas, the potential for damage and loss of life rises. A Category 3 hurricane in 1900 striking a sparsely populated coastline would have a vastly different impact compared to one hitting a densely populated city today. Again, this is unrelated to climate change. The notion that the number of U.S. hurricanes has dramatically increased over the last century doesn’t hold up under scrutiny. Nor does the notion that hurricanes have become more intense. Yet, increasing number of Americans are willing to risk their and our collective economic vitality on the altar of “carbon zero” policies. These policies significantly increase the cost of doing business, reduce our competitiveness, and risk massive blackouts — all based on false reporting on climate change.​

    Comment


      #26


      This is something im "involved" a free weather service for farmers.

      Glen i could give you a rough forecast for Meota if you want to message me be very rough but drying trend for you guys.

      Climate change deniers cherry pick climate change believers cherry pick.

      Media honestly is half the problem social media and tv etc. For intance and dont laugh yesterday our capital city was to have 6/10mm of rain , heavy at times. Morning media gobbed on about a "rain bomb" these heavy events "caused by climate change" nearly chocked in me scambled eggs.

      Every 2 or 3 day period of 36/38c a heat wave crickeys longest ever i remember in early 80s was 15 days above 39c way before climate change became topical.

      Dont get into pointless cut and pastes.

      Occasionlly have rung "weather" journalist from city media who know naf. all and have a crack at em. They couldnt forecast a shower in a bathroom.

      End of weather rant.

      Comment


        #27
        I don’t cherry pick anything, chuckroach’s world is all bullshit and lies and taxation till you can’t breathe anymore.

        Comment


          #28
          Hey im a climate change sceptic question everything.
          Not a shot at you TSIPP wasnt intended that way.

          Sceptic/Denier not the same similar yes but not same.

          Comment


            #29
            Originally posted by Landdownunder View Post
            Hey im a climate change sceptic question everything.
            Not a shot at you TSIPP wasnt intended that way.

            Sceptic/Denier not the same similar yes but not same.
            I think that applies to many of us

            Comment


              #30
              Most on here have got a grasp of why its wetter why its drier and trends over the blocks of years going back to 70s. Our patch we are low rainfall but reliable.

              Climate change is actually making us slightly wetter and bias to late spring summer like the 60s apparently. PS thats if it is climate change didnt word that well.

              If i had to have a wild guess at prairie weather going foward say 2 months.......warmer than average but along with that wetter than average. Maybe just maybe tricky harvest for some.

              What are the experts saying or chuck whats your for meota prognosis your ahead of the curve
              Last edited by Landdownunder; Jul 13, 2024, 02:16.

              Comment


                #31
                Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post

                Forage , you agree ??
                You know where I stand on Ukraine, what you getting at?

                It's just to bad so many on Agriville don't appreciate their freedom here in Canada.

                They would much rather support a commie dictator (Putin) and claim to be Righties , while sitting in their basements whining, moaning, and pissing about every little difficulty thrown their way in life on Agriville.

                Does that answer your question Farrow?



                Last edited by foragefarmer; Jul 13, 2024, 07:59.

                Comment


                  #32
                  Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
                  What a bunch of B/s
                  it barely hit Texas as a Cat 1
                  Huh? The article wasn't about a category 1 hurricane hitting Texas!

                  But maybe your comprehension skills are lacking furrow?

                  It was about the very high atlantic ocean temperatures and a very early Category 5 hurricane and the impact climate change is having on warming oceans and hurricanes.


                  "There has never been a category 5 Atlantic hurricane this early in the year before, with most major storms forming closer to September. Beryl, however, rapidly accelerated from a minor storm to a category four event in just two days.
                  This deadly intensification was aided by unusually hot ocean temperatures along much of Beryl’s path, scientists say, with seawater heated by the climate crisis helping provide the storm with extra energy over the past 10 days.
                  “Beryl would be astounding to happen anyway, but for it to form in June is completely unprecedented,” said Brian McNoldy, a climate scientist at the University of Miami. “It’s just remarkable to see sea temperatures this warm.
                  “I don’t think anyone would expect an outlier like this to happen, it exceeded expectations. With a climate-change influenced ocean, we are making extreme storms like this more likely to happen.”
                  Last edited by chuckChuck; Jul 14, 2024, 07:43.

                  Comment


                    #33
                    Storm chasing thing ya look for is high wind shear in thunderstorms, hurricanes exact opposite exasperated by low wind shear. Would suggest beryl had super low.

                    Aint checked. You guys in canada and states have such great weather from a weather nerds perspective

                    Comment


                      #34
                      Originally posted by foragefarmer View Post

                      You know where I stand on Ukraine, what you getting at?

                      It's just to bad so many on Agriville don't appreciate their freedom here in Canada.

                      They would much rather support a commie dictator (Putin) and claim to be Righties , while sitting in their basements whining, moaning, and pissing about every little difficulty thrown their way in life on Agriville.

                      Does that answer your question Farrow?


                      You lefties are absolutely insane, just keep throwing the bullshit and speaking disinformation, lay off the bud lights, it’s rotting away the few brain cells that are still functioning.

                      Comment


                        #35
                        Originally posted by TSIPP View Post

                        You lefties are absolutely insane, just keep throwing the bullshit and speaking disinformation, lay off the bud lights, it’s rotting away the few brain cells that are still functioning.
                        Amazing how mentioning that Bud Light commerical brings out the video watching wannabe so called Righties on Agriville from their closets.

                        Bawitdaba

                        Comment


                          #36
                          Now scientists are saying the eruption of Tonga in June of 2022 put an estimated 20 billion tons of water into the atmosphere which is like adding 10% already in the atmosphere. Water vapor traps heat.
                          It's starting to unwind.

                          Comment

                          • Reply to this Thread
                          • Return to Topic List
                          Working...