Sea surface temperatures and wind, however,
aren’t the only factors affecting hurricane activity. The model omitted
at least two other known factors — atmospheric humidity and sea level
pressure — and other more mysterious factors such as the tendency of
hurricane activity to occur in cycles that are decades long.
Even
though sea surface temperatures seem to have warmed, it’s not at all
clear that Atlantic hurricane activity has truly increased. As recently
described in World Climate Report,
the average hurricane activity during 1995-2005 was greater than that
during 1971-1994, but the 1970s and 1980s witnessed unusually low
hurricane activity. So the increased hurricane activity of 1995-2005
“thus appears to represent a recovery to normal hurricane activity,
rather than a direct response to increasing sea surface temperature,”
according to World Climate Report.
Finally,
regardless of whether warmer sea surface temperatures are associated
with increased hurricane activity, the University College London
researchers admitted that, “Our analysis does not identify whether
greenhouse gas-induced warming contributed to the increase in water
temperature and thus to the increase in hurricane activity.”
Since
the entire global warming debate depends on whether manmade greenhouse
gas emissions drive climate change, without a link between such
emissions and sea surface temperature changes, the claimed sea surface
temperature-hurricane activity link is, at best, an academic point.
The other hurricane study, published in Geophysical Research Letters
(Jan. 23) and not widely reported by the media, comes from climate
scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA).
The NOAA researchers compared sea
surface temperatures with hurricanes that made U.S. landfall — the most
reliable hurricane measurement over the long-term, according to the
researchers. They found a slight decrease in the trend of landfalling hurricanes with warmer sea surface temperatures.
“This
paper uses observational data to demonstrate that the attribution of
the recent increase in Atlantic hurricane activity to global warming is
premature and that global warming may decrease the likelihood of
hurricanes making landfall in the United States,” the researchers
concluded.
As leading hurricane forecaster
William Gray of Colorado State University put it, “Meteorologists who
study tropical cyclones have no valid physical theory as to why
hurricane frequency or intensity would necessarily be altered by small
amounts (plus/minus 0.5 degrees Centigrade) of global mean temperature
change.”
Dr. Gray continued, “In a global
warming or global cooling world, the atmosphere’s upper air
temperatures will warm or cool in unison with the sea surface
temperatures. Vertical-lapse rates [differences between the atmospheric
and sea temperatures that, when increased, tend to favor storm
formation] will not be significantly altered.”
In
observing that there were 80 major hurricanes during 1945-1969 when the
global temperature was cooling, but only 38 major hurricanes during
1970-1994 when global temperature was warming, Dr. Gray note that
“Atlantic sea-surface temperatures do not necessarily follow global
mean temperature trends.”
Even the United
Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) acknowledged
in its most recent assessment that although average Northern Hemisphere
temperatures in the last half of the 20 century were very likely higher
than at any other time during the last 500 years, “There is no clear
trend in the annual number of tropical cyclones [hurricanes].
And,
of course, Al Gore learned this lesson the hard way. His attempt in “An
Inconvenient Truth” to link manmade greenhouse gas emissions with the
Hurricane Katrina tragedy was sound rejected by a British High Court
judge who succinctly ruled that, “In
scene 12 Hurricane Katrina and the consequent devastation in New
Orleans is ascribed to global warming. It is common ground that there
is insufficient evidence to show that.”
As Sen. John McCain emerged from the Florida Republican primary as the Republican front runner, Politico.com observed that
“After hitting it in most every appearance he made in New Hampshire and
Michigan, John McCain now rarely brings up the topic of global
warming.” In talking to reporters after a campaign event in West Palm
Beach, McCain said, “I try to bring it up in areas that I think that it
is of great import to people.”
Given the
scientific evidence, it’s quite easy to understand why Floridians might
not think that alleged global warming-hurricane link is of great import.