
Hurricane expert and anthropogenic global warming skeptic William Gray has an opinion piece in today's Wall Street Journal.
That hurricanes are becoming more frequent, he says, has nothing to do with climate change. That's a relatively uncontroversial statement. Not so his next proposition: that hurricane intensity is also independent of climate change.
Gray has long held that hurricane severity is determined by oceanic surface temperatures that are themselves controlled by variations in water circulation.
Since 1995, he explains, the Atlantic's THC has been unusually strong
-- hence the stronger hurricanes. In the 25 years before that, THC and storms were correspondingly weak; for 20 years before that, they were strong; and in the first quarter of the 20th century, they were weak in tandem yet again.
Gray's among a tiny minority of climatologists who don't think that filling the atmosphere with CO2 affects the climate, but he has more company in the hurricane controversy -- and not just from industry flacks. Much more certainty exists about the general reality of climate change than its impact on storms. (That being said, many climate scientists do believe that the two are connected.)
So what do the experts say? Well, the Interngovernmental Panel on
Climate Change says that "it is 'more likely than not' ... that there is a human contribution to the observed trend of hurricane intensification since the 1970s." (Paraphrasing by the Pew Center on Global Climate Change.) Hardly a ringing declaration one way or the other. The World Meteorological Association says that "Though there is evidence both for and against the existence of a detectable anthropogenic signal in the tropical cyclone climate record to date, no firm conclusion can be made on this point." They add that the data is inconsistent and unreliable.
Just something to keep in mind when the next time you're arguing climate change with a skeptic: leave the hurricanes out of it.
Hurricanes and Hot Air [Wall Street Journal]
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Image: NASA*
