Hurricane Florence has ingredients that make experts worry
Seth Borenstein
1 hour ago
WASHINGTON
- To whip up a monstrous storm like the one chugging for the
Carolinas you need a handful of ingredients — and Florence has
them all.
Warmer
than normal sea temperatures to add energy and rain to a storm.
Check.
A
wind pattern that allows a storm to get strong and stay strong.
Check.
Higher
sea levels to make a storm surge worse. Check.
A
storm covering enormous area, to drench and lash more people.
Check.
And
an unusual combination of other weather systems that are likely to
stall Florence when it hits the Carolinas, allowing it to sit for
days and dump huge amounts of rain. Check.
"The
longer it stays, the more wind, the more rain. That means the more
trees that could fall, the more power outages," National
Hurricane Center Director Ken Graham said.
"This
one really scares me," Graham said. "It's one of those
situations where you're going to get heavy rain, catastrophic,
life-threatening storm surge, and also the winds."
The
National Hurricane Center Tuesday afternoon increased its rainfall
forecast to 15 to 25 inches of rain and 35 inches in isolated
spots. But a computer simulation known as the European model
predicts some places could get 45 inches. Sound unlikely? It's the
same model that accurately predicted that last year's Hurricane
Harvey, which also stalled over land, would drop 60 inches.
"It
does look a bit similar to Harvey in a sense that it goes roaring
into shore and then comes to a screeching stop," said MIT
meteorology professor and hurricane expert Kerry Emanuel. "This
is not a pretty sight."
Florence
is unusual in that it is aiming at the Carolinas from the east.
Usually storms come to the Carolinas and mid-Atlantic from the
south — and those usually curve safely out to sea.
But
a weather formation known as a high-pressure ridge is parked over
the U.S. East coast, preventing Florence from doing the normal
turn, said University of Miami hurricane expert Brian McNoldy.
After
Florence makes landfall, that ridge, now over Washington and New
York, will move east — but be replaced by another one forming
over the Great Lakes that will likely keep the storm stuck, McNoldy
said.
Florence's
path remains uncertain. It may move a little north into Virginia or
a little south into South Carolina. But it's such a large storm
that the rain will keep coming down in the region no matter where
it wanders. And with the Appalachian Mountains to the west, there
could be flooding and mudslides, experts worry.
Florence's
large size — tropical storm force winds extend 170 miles from the
centre in all directions — means its fury will arrive long before
the centre of the storm comes ashore, Graham said.
Some
of Florence's behaviour, both what has been seen so far and what
experts expect, show the influence of climate change.
Its
expected sluggishness is becoming more common, possibly a result of
climate change, said National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration climate scientist and hurricane expert Jim Kossin.
The
ocean waters that Florence is travelling over are about 2.7 degrees
(1.5 degrees Celsius) warmer than normal, McNoldy said. Even normal
water is warm enough for a storm to form there, but this adds to
the storm's fuel and its rainfall. The air is holding 10 per cent
more water that can be dumped as rain.
And
the storm surge, which could be as much as 12 feet in some areas,
will be on top of sea level rise from climate change. For example,
the seas off of Wilmington, North Carolina have risen 7.5 inches
since 1935, according to NOAA.
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Jennifer
N. Kay contributed to this report from Miami.
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The
Associated Press Health & Science Department receives support
from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science
Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
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