Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

Connecting the dots between climate change and extreme weather
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 3:15 PM GMT on May 04, 2012 +41
Connecting the dots between human-caused climate change and extreme weather events is fraught with difficulty and uncertainty. One the one hand, the underlying physics is clear--the huge amounts of heat-trapping gases like carbon dioxide humans have pumped into the atmosphere must be already causing significant changes to the weather. But the weather has huge natural variations on its own, without climate change. So, communicators of the links between climate change and extreme weather need to emphasize how climate change shifts the odds. We've loaded the dice towards some types of extreme weather events, by heating the atmosphere to add more heat and moisture. This can bring more extreme weather events like heat waves, heavy downpours, and intense droughts. What's more, the added heat and moisture can change atmospheric circulation patterns, causing meanders in the jet stream capable of bringing longer-lasting periods of extreme weather. As I wrote in my post this January, Where is the climate headed?, "The natural weather rhythms I've grown to used to during my 30 years as a meteorologist have become significantly disrupted over the past few years. Many of Earth's major atmospheric circulation patterns have seen significant shifts and unprecedented behavior; new patterns that were unknown have emerged, and extreme weather events were incredibly intense and numerous during 2010 - 2011. It boggles my mind that in 2011, the U.S. saw 14 - 17 billion-dollar weather disasters, three of which matched or exceeded some of the most iconic and destructive weather events in U.S. history."


Figure 1. Women who work on a tea farm in Assam, India hold up a dot in honor of Climate Impacts Day (May 5, 2012), to urge people to connect the dots between climate change and the threat to their livelihood. Chai is one of the most consumed beverages in India, but a prolonged dry spell and extreme heat has affected tea plantations in Assam and Bengal with production dropping by 60% as compared to the same period in 2011. Image credit: 350.org.

May 5: Climate Impacts Day
On Saturday, May 5 (Cinco de Mayo!), the activist group 350.org, founded by Bill McKibben, is launching a new effort to "connect the dots between climate change and extreme weather." They've declared May 5 Climate Impacts Day, and have coordinated an impressive global effort of nearly 1,000 events in 100 countries to draw attention to the links between climate change and extreme weather. Their new climatedots.org website aims to get people involved to "protest, educate, document and volunteer along with thousands of people around the world to support the communities on the front lines of the climate crisis." Some of the events planned for Saturday: firefighters in New Mexico will hold posters with dots in a forest ravaged by wildfires; divers in the Marshall Islands take a dot underwater to their dying coral reefs; climbers on glaciers in the Alps, Andes, and Sierras will unfurl dots on melting glaciers with the simple message: "Melting"; villagers in Northeastern Kenya will create dots to show how ongoing drought is killing their crops; in San Francisco, California, aerial artist Daniel Dancer and the Center for Biological Diversity will work with hundreds of people to form a giant, moving blue dot to represent the threat of sea level rise and ocean acidification; and city-dwellers in Rio de Janeiro hold dots where mudslides from unusually heavy rains wiped out part of their neighborhood. I think its a great way to draw attention to the links between climate change and extreme weather, since the mainstream media coverage of climate change has been almost nil the past few years. A report by Media Matters for America found out that nightly news coverage about climate change on the major networks decreased 72% between 2009 and 2011. On the Sunday shows, 97% of the stories mentioning climate change were about politics in Washington D.C. or on the campaign trail, not about extreme weather or recent scientific reports. You can check out what Climate Impacts Day events may be happening in your area at the climatedots.org website.


Figure 2. Front Street Bridge on the Susquehanna River in Vestal, NY, immediately following the flood of September 8, 2011. Image credit: USGS, New York. In my post, Tropical Storm Lee's flood in Binghamton: was global warming the final straw? I argue that during September 8, 2011 flood, the Susquehanna River rose twenty feet in 24 hours and topped the flood walls in Binghamton by 8.5 inches, so just a 6% reduction in the flood height would have led to no overtopping of the flood walls and a huge decrease in damage. Extra moisture in the air due to global warming could have easily contributed this 6% of extra flood height.

Also of interest
Anti-coal activists, led by climate scientist Dr. James Hansen of NASA, are acting on Saturday to block Warren Buffett's coal trains in British Columbia from delivering coal to Pacific ports for shipment overseas. Dave Roberts of Grist explains how this may be an effective strategy to reduce coal use, in his post, "Fighting coal export terminals: It matters".

The creator of wunderground's new Climate Change Center, atmospheric scientist Angela Fritz, has a blog post on Friday's unveiling of the new Heartland Institute billboards linking mass murderers like Charles Manson and Osama Bin Laden to belief in global warming. In Heartland's description of the billboard campaign, they say, "The people who still believe in man-made global warming are mostly on the radical fringe of society. This is why the most prominent advocates of global warming aren't scientists. They are murderers, tyrants, and madmen." The Heartland Institute neglected to mention that the Pope and the Dalai Lama are prominent advocates of addressing the dangers of human-caused climate change.

Jeff Masters
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1051. PedleyCA 3:10 PM GMT on May 06, 2012    
Quoting GeorgiaStormz:
Raining in AL, but still none in GA


Changed your Icon. I like it. Wish more people would take the time to at least find one to use instead of generic. And Good Morning to All
Member Since: February 29, 2012 Posts: 0 Comments: 2270
1052. tramp96 4:01 PM GMT on May 06, 2012    
Quoting Neapolitan:
Wait a minute. You're the one claiming intellectual and linguistic superiority over people you don't even know--yet I'm the snob? That's some awesome logic!


No I am making an assumption that a bunch of liberals
gave the two women a sign to hold.

BTW. Do you own a car?
Does your home use electricity?
Do you use plastic?
Obviously I could go on and on about
you're hypocricies but the list would be to
long.
Member Since: August 15, 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 329
1053. wunderkidcayman 4:34 PM GMT on May 06, 2012    
good morning guys !
Member Since: June 13, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 5997
1054. CosmicEvents 8:13 PM GMT on May 07, 2012    
Quoting Tribucanes:
Cosmic Events was really twisting the truth of the whole situation to get his side of the argument heard. You just nailed it and slammed any argument he may have, thank you. Hope he was just looking for attention, if not, your right; he was being very negligent. Skyepony said she was the caller in to events at times. The difference was they used her because she is very good. Thanks again for nailing it Xyrus

Churchill Downs has dozens of meteorologists with teams and with the event checking weather. This was just bordering on silly or intentional.
Churchill Downs does not have dozens of meteorologists, nor do they have teams checking the weather. They rely on the same info we have. Skyepony explained well how things work...you have a bunch of management types who know a great deal about running a racetrack but little about weather. They certainly don't rely on me for the informed call. I just call up friends who are interested, or in this case a friend who's a big-wig in security at that track just telling him to make sure management knew what was happening. I knew he'd be in a position to get word to the top people in seconds, which he did. Their call to evacuate was definitely not based on my advice..I had no advice as I'm not a weather expert. I can see how someone with the knowledge that Skyepony has could very well be a voice they'd listen to. Her opinion, if she had been around to offer it at the time, would have been welcome and passed on by me, or I would have given her the number to call directly. But, it's all moot..instead of anything constructive happening, we had a member try to just stir up some trouble. In my original post, in retrospect I should have explained the situation better and just maybe someone would have been able to ADD something to the main database, which is the NWS. The whole thing could be a learning experience, but instead it's another example of censorship by hypocrites as my posts are gone, yet his remain.
Member Since: August 3, 2005 Posts: 10 Comments: 5129
1055. CosmicEvents 8:44 PM GMT on May 07, 2012    
Quoting Xyrus2000:


I'm sorry dude, but you're clearly out of line here.

This is a blog of weather enthusiasts/volunteers. Scattered among us may be a few certifiable mets, but this is hardly the place to get professional advice on ANY weather events. The blog is not here to serve at your beck and call. If people aren't on, or lurking, feeling lazy/uninterested, or simply don't want to respond then you're not going to get a response.

If you are actually advising event organizers of weather conditions (especially major events), then pay for a professional service to provide real-time weather analysis or at the very least refer to your local NWS office. Going to blogs to get an analysis of a potential weather threat for an event with 100,000 people would be consider gross negligence at best and certainly wouldn't give you a leg to stand on in court if it came to that.
Another one? who's jumping to conclusions. Who said I'm in the business of advising track management on public safety matters? And charging for the service, which is what it would take to get to where it was a legal thing.
.
Nea, this was simply an attempt to get some added info that I could consider ON TOP of the main thing, what the NWS was saying. If members were as you describe lazy/uninterested and they could have added something....then this blog failed.
Member Since: August 3, 2005 Posts: 10 Comments: 5129

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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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