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Hurricanes Are Moving More Slowly, Which Means More Damage (npr.org)

An anonymous reader shares a report: Hurricanes are moving more slowly over both land and water, and that's bad news for communities in their path. In the past 70 years, tropical cyclones around the world have slowed down 10 percent, and in some regions of the world, the change has been even more significant, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal Nature. That means storms are spending more time hanging out, battering buildings with wind and dropping more rain. "The slowdown over land is what's really going to effect people," says James Kossin, the author of the study and a tropical cyclone specialist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. He points to Hurricane Harvey's effect on Houston as an example of what slower storms can mean for cities. "Hurricane Harvey last year was a real outlier in terms of the amount of rain it dropped," he explains. "And the amount of rain it dropped was due, almost entirely, to the fact that it moved so slowly."

5 of 96 comments (clear)

  1. More time to get out of the way? by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 4, Interesting

    More damage where they hit, but doesn't that also mean you have more time to evacuate people to get out of the path. In theory a slower moving hurricane may mean more damage but should it not mean less human fatalities? At least in places that have the financial ability to move people out the path.

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    "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    1. Re:More time to get out of the way? by sqorbit · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I don't know if it was just because I paid more attention, but last Hurricane season they seemed to have trouble predicting the path. They had 3 or 4 probable paths listed at once with at least one. More time should allow for that as long as we can predict where it's going to hit.

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      Sent from my TARDIS
    2. Re:More time to get out of the way? by squiggleslash · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Alas no. The major issue with evacuations is predicting the path. Hurricanes going slower doesn't mean they're less likely to change path 12 hours before impact.

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      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    3. Re:More time to get out of the way? by Sarten-X · · Score: 4, Interesting

      One of the interesting trends with winter storms especially is that we just don't care as much. An equal storm does less apparent damage.

      A few short decades ago, even a minor snowstorm would knock out power for a few hours. One I woke up and realized my alarm clock wasn't working, I'd have to call and report the outage, and eventually somebody would come around and fix the one service line coming through my area.

      Now, the service network can detect its own faults and dispatch repairs automatically. My alarm clock is now my phone, and it runs on its own battery - along with the cell tower. My LED lights and high-efficiency heating don't add nearly so much load to the electrical grid, so when my now-redundant area is automatically switched over to a backup line, that equipment can handle the additional load without any problem.

      Of course, building codes have also improved, so a storm of equal power is less likely to damage a newer building. Digital communications don't noticeably degrade as quickly as analog, either. With resilient electrical systems powering streetlights and widespread communications enabling coordination through the storm, the snowplows teams can run better with less risk, so by the time I need to actually travel, the roads are clear. With clear roads, businesses stay open, and life moves on as normal.

      It seems to me that most of the big storms that are predicted now are actually big storms... they just don't impact my life so much.

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  2. Aren't we all? by I'm+just+joshin · · Score: 4, Funny

    After 70 years, I expect to be moving slower too.