Climate
change blamed for Australia's extreme weather
The
east coast of Australia has been drenched by floods and torrential
rains, even as recent bush fires affecting much of the country
continued to burn. Four people are known to have died as Australians
get a further taste of extreme weather that is predicted to become
more common as the planet warms.
29
January, 2013
The
deluge came as a storm that started as tropical cyclone Oswald just
north of Australia was dragged south over most of the east coast by a
low-pressure system extending all the way to New South Wales, says
Richard Wardle of the Bureau of Meteorology in Queensland. As it hit
land, Oswald lost its cyclone status but remained a "vigorous"
storm, Wardle says.
With
no low-pressure zone further east to pull Oswald out to sea, the
storm stayed over land, moving slowly south and dumping huge amounts
of rain on coastal communities. Bundaberg, a town in Queensland,
experienced its worst-ever flood as the storm lingered nearby for
nearly 24 hours, leading to the evacuation of 7500 people from their
homes. In Brisbane, the floods were almost as bad as those that
devastated the city two years ago.
Climate
change to blame
In
Queensland and New South Wales, the deluge arrived while the bush
fires that broke out two weeks were still smouldering. At the time,
the Bureau of Meteorology said that the exceptionally hot, dry
weather that led to the fires was "consistent" with climate
change. Experts are now drawing the same conclusions about the rains.
"The
frequency of more intense events is going to increase. Droughts,
heatwaves and – in northern Australia – rainfall events and
tropical cyclones are going to be more intense," says Jon Nott
of James Cook University in Townsville, Australia, who researches
extreme weather events.
Nott
says that more intense rainfall in the tropics and subtropics is one
of the things we can expect with global warming. The connection
between tropical cyclones and climate change is complicated: fewer
cyclones are expected, but the ones that strike will be more severe.
They could also become 20 per cent wetter.
Nott
points out that Australia might be experiencing a "double
whammy" of climate change and natural variability, driving
wetter conditions. One natural pattern, the Interdecadal Pacific
Oscillation, affects circulation in the Pacific, and reverses every
20 or 30 years. It flipped about five years ago for the first time
since 1977, bringing warmer waters to Australia's east coast. "During
those phases, Queensland sees more flooding, more rainfall, and more
landfalling tropical cyclones," Nott says. Climate change will
only compound the effects of such patterns, he says.
Thank you for sharing this post. I found it informative and interesting. Extreme weather is happening all over the globe and we need to be prepared. In such places with extreme weather shifts it is important to have your heating and ac running in perfect condition. There is nothing worse than being stuck in the cold with no heat!
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