Hurricanes are becoming so strong we may need a new scale to rate them
Related: The growing inadequacy of an open-ended SaffirSimpson hurricane wind scale in a warming world (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences]
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Source: NewScientist
Hurricanes are becoming so strong we may need a new scale to rate them
Five storms in the past decade had wind speeds that belong in a hypothetical category 6 on the Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale
By Michael Le Page
5 February 2024
In the past decade, five tropical storms had wind speeds so high that they should have been classified as category 6 storms, according to an analysis that suggests the hurricane scale may need to be updated as rising temperatures fuel stronger storms.
If carbon emissions continue at current rates, we might even see category 7 storms. It certainly is theoretically possible if we keep warming the planet, says climate scientist James Kossin at the First Street Foundation, a non-profit research organisation in New York.
Officially, there is no such thing as a category 6 or category 7 hurricane. According to the Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale used by the National Hurricane Center (NHC) in the US, any storm with sustained wind speeds of 252 kilometres per hour and over is a category 5.
But as the wind speeds of the strongest storms get faster, the use of this scale is increasingly problematic, say Kossin and his colleague Michael Wehner at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California, as it doesnt convey the increasing risks posed by ever stronger storms.
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Read more: https://www.newscientist.com/article/2415741-hurricanes-are-becoming-so-strong-we-may-need-a-new-scale-to-rate-them/