Roger Pielke quoted in Al Jazeera America article on extreme weather

Roger Pielke, Jr. quoted in an Al Jazeera America article on extreme weather.

The next superstorm: Preparing for extreme weather
Scientists debate impact of climate change, but agree we must brace ourselves for natural disasters

Hurricane Katrina wreaks havoc on the Gulf Coast in 2005. Superstorm Sandy brings destruction to the East Coast in 2012. Heavy rains in the middle of the country lead to flooding in the rugged Rocky Mountains in 2013.

Each crisis brings greater urgency to preparations for the next storm. Scientists disagree on whether climate change is causing these cataclysms, but agree that humans, whose carbon emissions have altered the environment, need to change their thinking and habits to reflect the new, powerful effects of disastrous weather.

“All weather events these days are affected by climate change,” argues Kevin Trenberth, a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder and a lead author of several assessments by the United Nations-backed Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Extreme events like Sandy “are developing in an environment that is different than it would have been without climate change,” he told Al Jazeera. For instance, climate change has made our world wetter, meaning storms pack more water power: “It rains harder, the storms tend to be a bit stronger,” Trenberth said. Read more …

This entry was posted in In the News. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.