Web Stories Wednesday, October 9

Bernadette Woods Placky, chief meteorologist at NGO Climate Central, said Helene “had so much intensity” that it would take time for it to lose strength, but the “storm was moving fast … so it could go farther inland pretty quickly.”

This study utilised three methodologies to examine the three aspects of the storm, and was conducted by researchers from the US, the UK, Sweden and the Netherlands.

To study its rainfall, researchers used an approach based on both observation and climate models, depending on the two regions involved: one for coastal areas like Florida, and another for inland areas like the Appalachian mountains.

In both cases, the study found precipitation had increased by 10 per cent because of global warming, which is currently at 1.3 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

To study Helene’s winds, scientists looked at hurricane data dating back as far as 1900.

They determined Helene’s winds were 11 per cent stronger, or 21kmh, as a result of climate change.

Lastly, the researchers examined the water temperature in the Gulf of Mexico, where Helene formed, finding it was around 2 degrees Celsius above normal.

This record temperature was made 200 to 500 times more likely due to climate change, the study asserts.

Warmer oceans release more water vapor, providing more energy for storms as they form.

“If humans continue to burn fossil fuels, the US will face even more destructive hurricanes,” Clarke warned in a statement.

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