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Midwest Tornadoes: Record Week Of Twisters Hit America's Heartland

First Posted: 03/ 5/2012 6:17 pm Updated: 03/ 6/2012 5:34 pm


By Sharon Begley

NEW YORK, March 5 (Reuters) - When at least 80 tornadoes rampaged across the United States, from the Midwest to the Gulf of Mexico, last Friday, it was more than is typically observed during the entire month of March, tracking firm AccuWeather.com reported on Monday.

According to some climate scientists, such earlier-than-normal outbreaks of tornadoes, which typically peak in the spring, will become the norm as the planet warms.

"As spring moves up a week or two, tornado season will start in February instead of waiting for April," said climatologist Kevin Trenberth of the National Center for Atmospheric Research.

Whether climate change will also affect the frequency or severity of tornadoes, however, remains very much an open question, and one that has received surprisingly little study.

"There are only a handful of papers, even to this day," said atmospheric scientist Robert Trapp of Purdue University, who led a pioneering 2007 study of tornadoes and climate change.

"Some of us think we should be paying more attention to it," said atmospheric physicist Anthony Del Genio of the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, part of NASA.

The scientific challenge is this: the two conditions necessary to spawn a twister are expected to be affected in opposite ways. A warmer climate will likely boost the intensity of thunderstorms but could dampen wind shear, the increase of wind speed at higher altitudes, researchers say.

Tomorrow's thunderstorms will pack a bigger wallop, but may strike less frequently than they have historically, explained Del Genio.

"As we go to a warmer atmosphere, storms - which transfer energy from one region to another - somehow figure out how to do that more efficiently," he said. As a result, thunderstorms transfer more energy per outbreak, and so have to make such transfers less often.

In a 2011 paper, Del Genio calculated that, "especially in the central and eastern United States, we can expect a few more days per month with conditions favorable to severe thunderstorm occurrence" by the latter part of this century if the global climate grows warmer.

Indeed, the world has been experiencing more violent storms since 1970, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reported in its most recent assessment.


EXTENDING TORNADOES' PATH

Purdue's Trapp and colleagues got a similar result in their 2007 study, which they confirmed in research published in 2009 and 2011. "The number of days when conditions exist to form tornadoes is expected to increase" as the world warms, he said.

In addition, they found, regions near the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic coasts not normally associated with tornadoes will experience tornado-making weather more frequently. They projected a doubling in the number of days with such conditions in Atlanta and New York City, for instance.

More powerful thunderstorms would be expected to produce more tornadoes, but wind shear could prove a mitigating factor.

Because climate change is not uniform, Del Genio wrote in the 2011 paper, "in the lower troposphere, the temperature difference between low and high latitudes decreases as the planet warms, creating less wind shear."

Other scientists are not so sure, and they see a surge in tornadoes last year as ominous. April 2011 was the most active tornado month on record, with 753, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), compared to the previous record of 267 in April 1974.

"I have no doubt that there will be many times when wind shear is plenty strong to create a tornado," said Trenberth.

That is what Trapp's team concluded in their 2007 study. "Over most of the United States," they wrote, the increase in the power of thunderstorms will "more than compensate for the relative decreases in shear."

As a result, "the environment would still be considered favorable for severe convection" of the kind that creates tornadoes.

From March to May the projected increase in severe storms is "largest over a 'tornado-alley'-like region extending northward from Texas," Trapp found. From June through August, the eastern half of the country is projected to experience such an increase.

If there are more days in the future when wind shear is too weak to produce a tornado from a thunderstorm, said Trenberth, then "the frequency of tornadoes may decrease but the average intensity might increase. You could have a doozy of an outbreak, and then they could go away for a while."

On average, about 800 tornados are reported annually in the United States. About 70 percent are "weak," finds NOAA, with winds less than 110 mph (177 kph) . Just under 29 percent are "strong," with winds between 110 and 205 mph (177 and 329 kph) . Only 2 percent of all tornadoes are what NOAA characterizes as "violent," with winds in excess of 205 mph (329 kph) , but they account for 70 percent of all twister deaths. (Editing by Michele Gershberg and Sandra Maler)

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By Sharon Begley NEW YORK, March 5 (Reuters) - When at least 80 tornadoes rampaged across the United States, from the Midwest to the Gulf of Mexico, last Friday, it was more than is t...
By Sharon Begley NEW YORK, March 5 (Reuters) - When at least 80 tornadoes rampaged across the United States, from the Midwest to the Gulf of Mexico, last Friday, it was more than is t...
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01:03 PM on 03/24/2012
Make everyone read The Three Little Pigs and build homes that will not blow away! Monolithic Concrete construction is virtually indestructible
www.safedomes.com
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REMEMBER2050
Bring on that War on Women, GOP! I'm game.
12:11 PM on 03/21/2012
This seems incredibly simple. Since the U.S. has done nothing to address climate change, our whole country is therefore a great big petri dish for experiments. So I say let's just wait for a string of a few years here with our annual disaster bills in the trillions, and then everybody's gonna be all anxious to finally jump on that climate change bandwagon.

So, you climate change deniers getting paid by the post, nothing really here for you to refute, is there. I'm saying let's just wait and see, seeing that's what we're doing anyway.

Of course, that also means sooner or later (I bet sooner), we're going to belately realize we're destroying the planet, and we're going to have to throw everything we have at climate change. But then we'll find ourselves spectacularly unable to do much there, since, after all, we invest almost nothing in this type of r&d, much less in assisting in new manufacturing efforts.

Now China approaches this RATHER differently. Not only do they acknowledge climate change and even understand that they'll be screwed along with everybody else, but also--they can make money and jobs WHILE fixing the problem. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/19/opinion/19friedman.html?_r=2

How amusing the tandem lesson we'll learn, along with climate change actually happening, is that the U.S. really sucks at capitalism.
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StephenBP
What's he building in there?
08:57 PM on 03/10/2012
It is not good news that there have been more tornadoes of late.

As the evidence of the negative effects global warming continues to build up, I think that we can expect more tornadic activity from the people who attempt to spin the opinions of experts as being meaningless. These folks continually approach discussions on climate science by first making derogatory comments like the school yard bully, and then attempt to show how they know more about climatology than climatologists. I'm no expert, but that sort of bullying and grandiosity does not strike as being healthy, rational, or civilized.

What do you think?
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jimspy
Quod quae operibus sufficit.
05:21 PM on 03/11/2012
I'm with you. At the same time, I am predicting that "climate change denial" will be a quaint artifact of the past within about 4 years. It will almost certainly die out as the evidence becomes "undeniable." But something tells me it will grow quite loud right before then, a last gasp, as if to drown out the truth.
12:22 PM on 03/07/2012
It seems to me that alarmists must have never taken thermodynamics

If CO2 is causing warming it should cause less “unusual” weather not more.

Lets do a thought experiment.

Imagine yourself in a cold room with a bathing suit on.

Imagine a sun lamp over your stomach.

How are your feet ? Cold ? [Probably.]

Now put on several wool blankets and stay on the table [That is the CO2]

You feel warmer overall but the difference between your chest and toes is much less…… right !

Winds are caused by temperature difference not absolute temperature. If you have ever stood on a windy corner in January you know what I mean.

I have sat in my sailboat in the ocean going nowhere when it was 100 F+. When sundown came the land cooled faster and the wind started up, always.

So CO2, which acts like a blanket by slowing the escape of heat would even out temperature and cause LESS NOT MORE climate disruption. That isn’t frightening enough and the contributions of the gullible to research would dry up!
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PaulBardinas
Educating one person at a time.
02:45 PM on 03/07/2012
You again. I had resisted to jump on the bandwagon of other comments that labeled you an oil industry employee, but now it seems pretty clear. This is identical to a previous comment you posted before. Does ExxonMobil just provide you with a set of sudo-scientific stock comments to post anytime a global warming or climate change article appears. Nifty gig! Do you get paid a salary, houry, or by the post? Too funny. I really thought that some on the left were just a bit paranoid, but your proof positive of a denial and misinformation campaign.
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PaulBardinas
Educating one person at a time.
02:51 PM on 03/07/2012
Do you have even a little bit of guilt for knowingly deceiving people, spreading propoganda, and supporting industries that could care less about the human and environmental toll that they're behavior takes. I'm own a business. I like profits and money as much as the next guy, but I've always felt that there was more to life than exploitation and greed. I suppose it's why I've kept my company privately owned, because once you go public companies just seems to lose their humanity.
10:32 PM on 03/07/2012
Do you spam much ?

No I have no guilt about opposing the climate change industry which is spreading false fear for financial gain.
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missouriwatcher
military veteran, veteran teacher, father, grandpa
11:59 AM on 03/07/2012
While tornadoes can, and do happen, anywhere at any time, we have been seeing a steady rise in tornadoes year round in the Midwest. While winter tornadoes used to be mostly a phenomenon of the deep South, this is no longer the case; tornadoes in Missouri have been more frequent than in past years, especially those occurring in the winter months.
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FreeThinker in AZ
World traveler & Green Progressive
10:06 AM on 03/07/2012
Tornadoes in 2011 killed more than 550 people, more than in the previous 10 years combined. Global warming will likely mean more unpredictable weather, scientists say. People just have to get use to if because there is nothing any body can do about it now...
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StephenBP
What's he building in there?
10:02 AM on 03/07/2012
I like what physicist Anthony Del Genio of the Goddard institute for Space Studies at NASA said..”Some of us think we should be paying more attention to it."

We should be investing more, not less, in climate study IMO. Our population is growing, our land mass is not. Our water supplies are not growing in fact they are shrinking. Our amount of agricultural land is not growing to the best of my knowledge and development in general tends to shrink it. And again, our population is growing.

If this type of weather disaster is going to become more common in the future, we should know more about it figure out how best to deal with it, and not pretend that it is not happening, as the ideologically driven Heartland Institute would have us believe.
09:47 AM on 03/07/2012
I spent a good part of my aviation career in airline training departments, from simulator instructor to FAA Examiner to Director of Training, and several times wrote curriculum's to be used by instructors to teach aviation weather. I was assisted by meteorologists and climatologists from the NOAA. The absolute basis of ALL ENVIRONMENTAL WEATHER can be summed up in a single statement. ALL WEATHER IS THE RESULT OF TEMPERATURE EXCHANGES. POLAR ICE creates the COLD TEMPERATURE and SOLAR ENERGY creates the WARM TEMPERATURE. It's an absolute fact polar ice has decreased INCREDIBLY in the last 50 years. Drop an ice cube in a glass of tea. Tea gets colder. As ice melts the "cold soaked" ice in the middle of the cube can make the tea even colder. But there is a point that the size of the cube can no longer maintain the low temp, and it starts to rise faster and faster. At that point you can put the tea in an insulated cup or the shade but you're only delaying the time to room temperature tea.
Bottom line. As the polar ice melts we will have increasingly wild weather, and when the ice is gone it's going to get HOT.
And here's the kicker. The difference from a sub-tropical Savannah (Florida) and a desert (Arizona) is an average year round +4 degree temp increase.
12:16 PM on 03/07/2012
Warming does not cause deserts, lack of water does.

The alarmists claim that warming will increase the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere so it will get wetter.

GOT TO LOVE THE WAY THE ALARMISTS MANIPULATE THE SCARE TO FIT THE MOMENT !

Antarctica is the biggest desert on earth.

I went to Costa Rica where it is undeniably warm but it was wet and lush and a great place to live.
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PaulBardinas
Educating one person at a time.
02:57 PM on 03/07/2012
Again! An exact copy of a previous post. WOW!! Don't you think it might be a good idea to at least change the comments around a bit. Perhaps I should just go find all my previous comments where I completely corrected all your absurd claims with the scientific facts and just re-post those. Problem is there is no left-wing tree hugging industry to pay me to waste my time. Darn!! It's sad, but some uninformed readers, not aware of your mischief, will actually have that seed of doubt planted by your lies. Congratulations! You're actively helping to destroy our planet for all future generations. I hope you're proud.
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GoNoles03
Hot towels ... they make the world a better place.
04:49 AM on 03/07/2012
Seems every year it's gloom and doom. Last year it was far warmer in the Gulf states by this time, so our mT air was more violent mixing with the north's cP air. I just don't see a Tuscaloosa/Joplin year happening again. *knock on wood*
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blueagle8u
11:15 PM on 03/06/2012
Don't worry the GOP says it has NOTHING to do with Global warming because THATS make believe!
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Robert Fanney
Scribbler
09:02 PM on 03/06/2012
This year we have the effects of a powerful La Nina, compounded by global warming. But the tornado season will creep more and more into winter as time goes by.
08:55 PM on 03/06/2012
Disasters such as these tornadoes have the potential to cause significant levels of distress - like overwhelming feelings of anxiety or hopelessness- in survivors living and working in impacted areas (incl. children), loved ones of victims, and first responders. The Disaster Distress Helpline is a new service funded by SAMHSA that offers 24/7 crisis counseling: call toll-free 1-800-985-5990 or text 'talkwithus' to 66746. Calls and texts are answered by trained crisis counselors from call centers located throughout the U.S.
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willowtree3
Adopt a shelter animal.
06:26 PM on 03/06/2012
Shorter cold months? Probably.
But, there is also the global weirding effect of massive snow amounts.
Oklahoma could be in the 30's for instance, with New Mexico suffering with a heat wave.
Thanks coal industry. It's all up for grabs now.
12:17 PM on 03/07/2012
Weirding weather is just an excuse for blaming all weather on CO2, it only fools the fools.
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tc399
Your personal Eschatologist.
05:41 PM on 03/06/2012
Bu we don't need to have them according to Pat Robertson. First, more imprecatory prayer would have stopped them. Then, if not, why would anyone build a home where there was a chance of tornados?

Well...because you told us we could prevent the tornados, Pat.
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jwald1
Badges? I don't need no stinking badges!
06:22 PM on 03/06/2012
I read that too, the simple fact is there is no place on earth that is free of natural disasters, so following Pat's logic, god does not want us living anywhere.
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tc399
Your personal Eschatologist.
09:51 PM on 03/06/2012
Welcome to Christianity. It's not supposed to make sense. It's just supposed to make you feel better when a relative dies. You can pretend they went to Heaven when everyone knows they are bobbing for charcoal in Fire Lake.
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blueagle8u
11:17 PM on 03/06/2012
Due to Global warming we are getting them a LOT more often in New York too!!