WASHINGTON - Nature is pummeling the United States this year with extremes.
Unprecedented triple-digit heat and devastating drought. Deadly
tornadoes leveling towns. Massive rivers overflowing. A billion-dollar
blizzard. And now, unusual hurricane-caused flooding in Vermont.
If
what's falling from the sky isn't enough, the ground shook in places
that
normally seem stable: Colorado and the entire East Coast. On
Friday, a strong quake triggered brief tsunami warnings in Alaska.
Arizona and New Mexico have broken records for wildfires.
Total
weather losses top $35 billion, and that's not counting Hurricane
Irene,
according to the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration.
There
have been more than 700 U.S. disaster and weather deaths, most
from
the tornado outbreaks this spring.
Last
year, the world seemed to go wild with natural disasters in the
deadliest year in a generation. But 2010 was bad globally, and the
United
States mostly was spared.
This
year, while there have been devastating events elsewhere, such as
the
earthquake and tsunami in Japan, Australia's flooding and a drought
in
Africa, it's our turn to get smacked. Repeatedly.
"I'm
hoping for a break. I'm tired of working this hard. This is
ridiculous," said Jeff Masters, a meteorologist who runs Weather
Underground, a meteorology service that tracks strange and extreme
weather. "I'm not used to seeing all these extremes all at once in one
year."
The
U.S. has had a record 10 weather catastrophes costing more than a
billion dollars: five separate tornado outbreaks, two different major
river
floods in the Upper Midwest and the Mississippi River, drought in
the
Southwest and a blizzard that crippled the Midwest and Northeast,
and
Irene.
What's
happening, say experts, is mostly random chance or bad luck. But
there
is something more to it, many of them say. Man-made global warming
is
increasing the odds of getting a bad roll of the dice.
Sometimes the luck seemed downright freakish.
The
East Coast got a double-whammy in one week with a magnitude 5.8
earthquake followed by a drenching from Irene. If one place felt more
besieged than others, it was tiny Mineral, Va., the epicenter of the
quake,
where Louisa County Fire Lt. Floyd Richard stared at the
darkening sky before Irene and said, "What did WE do to Mother Nature to
come
through here like this."
There
are still four months to go, including September, the busiest
month
of the hurricane season. The Gulf Coast expected a soaking this
weekend from Tropical Storm Lee and forecasters were watching Hurricane
Katia
slogging west in the Atlantic.
The
insurance company Munich Re calculated that in the first six months
of the
year there have been 98 natural disasters in the United States,
about
double the average of the 1990s.
Even
before Irene, the Federal Emergency Management Agency was on pace
to
obliterate the record for declared disasters issued by state,
reflecting both the geographic breadth and frequency of America's
problem-plagued year.
"If
you weren't in a drought, you were drowning is what it came down
to,"
Masters said.
Add to
that, oppressive and unrelenting heat. Tens of thousands of daily
weather records have been broken or tied and nearly 1,000 all-time
records set, with most of them heat or rain related:
-
Oklahoma set a record for hottest month ever in any state with July.
-
Washington D.C. set all-time heat records at the National Arboretum on
July
23 with 105 and then broke it a week later with 106.
-
Houston had a record string of 24 days in August with the thermometer
over
100 degrees.
-
Newark, N.J., set a record with 108 degrees, topping the old mark by 3
degrees.
Tornadoes this year hit medium-sized cities such as Joplin, Mo., and
Tuscaloosa, Ala. The outbreaks affected 21 states, including unusual
deadly
twisters in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Massachusetts.
"I
think this year has really been extraordinary in terms of natural
catastrophes," said Andreas Schrast, head of catastrophic perils for
Swiss
Re, another big insurer.
One of
the most noticeable and troubling weather extremes was the
record-high nighttime temperatures, said Tom Karl, director of NOAA's
National Climatic Data Center. That shows that the country wasn't
cooling off at all at night, which both the human body and crops need.
"These
events are abnormal," Karl said. "But it's part of an ongoing
trend
we've seen since 1980."
Individual weather disasters so far can't be directly attributed to
global
warming, but it is a factor in the magnitude and the string of
many
of the extremes, Karl and other climate scientists say.
While
the hurricanes and tornado outbreaks don't seem to have any clear
climate change connection, the heat wave and drought do, said NASA
climate scientist Gavin Schmidt.
This
year, there's been a Pacific Ocean climate phenomenon that changes
weather patterns worldwide known as La Nina, the flip side to El Nino.
La
Ninas normally trigger certain extremes such as flooding in Australia
and
drought in Texas. But global warming has taken those events and
amplified them from bad to record levels, said climate scientist Jerry
Meehl
at the National Center for Atmospheric Research.
Judith
Curry of Georgia Tech disagreed, saying that while humans are
changing the climate, these extremes have happened before, pointing to
the
1950s.
"Sometimes it seems as if we have weather amnesia," she said.
Another factor is that people are building bigger homes and living in
more
vulnerable places such as coastal regions, said Swiss Re's Schrast.
Worldwide insured losses from disasters in the first three months this
year
are more than any entire year on record except for 2005, when
Hurricane Katrina struck, Schrast said.
Unlike
last year, when many of the disasters were in poor countries such
as
Haiti and Pakistan, this year's catastrophes have struck richer
areas,
including Australia, Japan and the United States.
The
problem is so big that insurers, emergency managers, public
officials and academics from around the world are gathering Wednesday in
Washington for a special three-day National Academy of Sciences summit
to
figure out how to better understand and manage extreme events.
The
idea is that these events keep happening, and with global warming
they
should occur more often, so society has to learn to adapt, said
former
astronaut Kathryn Sullivan, NOAA's deputy chief.
Sullivan, a scientist, said launching into space gave her a unique
perspective on Earth's "extraordinary scale and power and both
extraordinary elegance and finesse."
"We
are part of it. We do affect it," Sullivan said. "But it surely
affects us on a daily basis - sometimes with very powerful punches.
Jim Munley Jr.
http://www.geocities.com/jimmunleywx
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