Science

Tropical cyclones are slowing down, dumping more rain

Tropical cyclones around the world are moving slightly slower over land and water, dumping more rain as they stall, just as Hurricane Harvey did last year, a new study has found.

Globally, storms are moving 10 per cent slower than in 1940s and 1950s

Hurricane Irma drives toward Florida in a Sept. 8, 2017 image. Storms in the last few years — before 2017 — were moving about 10 per cent slower globally than in the late 1940s and 1950s, according to a study published in Nature Wednesday. (NOAA National Weather Service National Hurricane Center/Handout via Reuters)

Tropical cyclones around the world are moving slightly slower over land and water, dumping more rain as they stall, just as Hurricane Harvey did last year, a new study has found.

This isn't about how powerful a storm's winds are, just how fast it chugs along. Storms in the last few years — before 2017's Harvey — were moving about 10 per cent slower globally than in the late 1940s and 1950s, according to a study published in Nature Wednesday. Storms worldwide in 2016 moved about two kilometres per hour (1.25 miles per hour) slower than they did in 1949.

In the Atlantic Ocean basin, the slowdown was not dramatic, just six per cent. But when Atlantic storms hit land — like Harvey — the study said the slowdown is a significant 20 per cent. Atlantic storms that make landfall moved 4.7 km/hour (2.9 mph) slower than in 1949, it said.

"The slower a storm goes, the more rain it's going to dump in any particular area," said study author James Kossin, a government climate scientist. "Hurricane Harvey last year was a great example of what a slow storm can do."

This map shows much tropical cyclones have slowed in different regions in the past 70 years. Local tropical cyclone rainfall totals would be expected to increase by the same percentage due to the slowing alone. Increases in rainfall due to warming global temperatures would compound these local rainfall totals even further. (NOAA/NCEI)

Harvey, which killed at least 68 people, dropped a record 1,524 millimetres (60 inches) of rain in parts of southeastern Texas, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center.

Kossin started his research before the 2017 season, stopping his analysis at 2016. Adding last year's storms would have made the slowdown a bit more prominent, he said.

More strong winds

Unhurried hurricanes also mean strong winds blowing more often over the same place and possibly more storm surge, Kossin said.

The trend has all the signs of human-caused climate change, Kossin said. But the study did not look at causes by using computer models to simulate the Earth with and without warming. It is based solely on past observations, he said.

Another study that came out recently, using computer models, concluded that future storm movements will slow because of climate change.

Naomi Coto carries dog Simba on her shoulders as they leave their home after the area was inundated with flooding by Hurricane Harvey on Aug. 27, 2017, in Houston. The storm dropped a record 1,524 millimetres (60 inches) of rain in parts of southeastern Texas. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Climate change is tinkering with and slowing down atmospheric circulation patterns — the wind currents that move weather along, Kossin said.

Outside scientists were skeptical. That's mostly because data before the 1970s is not reliable so it is hard to make such conclusions, said University of Miami hurricane researcher Brian McNoldy.

Kossin acknowledged problems with pre-1970s data but said that most of it deals with how strong storms are. Older data on location, and thus movement, are more reliable, Kossin said.

"Kossin is right that a 10 per cent change in tropical cyclone motion would be an important change due to its effect on accumulated precipitation," Texas state climatologist John Nielsen-Gammon said in an email.

"I just need more convincing that there actually has been a 10 per cent motion change."