Great Walls 'could stop tornadoes'

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-26492720

Great Walls 'could stop tornadoes'
8 March 2014 03:27
By James Morgan

Science reporter, BBC News, Denver

More than 800 tornadoes were recorded in the US last year
Building three "Great Walls" across Tornado Alley in the US could eliminate
the disasters, a physicist says.

The barriers - 300m (980ft) high and up to 100 miles long - would act like
hill ranges, softening winds before twisters can form.

They would cost $16bn (£9.6bn) to build but save billions of dollars of
damage each year, said Prof Rongjia Tao, of Temple University, Philadelphia.

He unveiled his idea at the American Physical Society meeting in Denver.

However critics say the idea is unworkable, and would create more problems
than it solves.

Threat over 'forever'

Every year hundreds of twisters tear through communities in the great
north-south corridor between the Rocky and Appalachian Mountain ranges.

The proposed walls would not shelter towns - they would not be strong
enough to block a tornado in motion.

Instead, they would soften the clashing streams of hot southern and cold
northern air, which form twisters in the first place, Prof Tao said.

"If we build three east-west great walls, one in North Dakota, one along
the border between Kansas and Oklahoma, and the third in the south in Texas
and Louisiana, we will diminish the threats in Tornado Alley forever," he
said.

As evidence, he points to China - where only three tornadoes were recorded
last year, compared to 803 in the US.

China too has flat plain valleys running north-south, but the difference is
they are broken up by east-west hill ranges.

Although only a few hundred metres high, they are enough to take the sting
out of air currents before they clash, Prof Tao believes.

Hotspot

Back in the US, he notes that the flat farmlands of Illinois experience
wildly varying risks of twisters.

"Washington County is a tornado hotspot. But just 60 miles (100km) away is
Gallatin County, where there is almost no risk," he told BBC News.

"Why? Just look at the map - at Gallatin you have the Shawnee Hills."

These act like a barrier 200-250m (820ft) high, protecting Gallatin, he
says.

"We may not have east-west mountain ranges - like the Alps in Europe - we
can build walls."

Prof Tao said the design of the walls could be inspired by the Comcast
skyscraper in Philadelphia
"We've already been doing computer simulations and next we aim to build
physical models for testing [in wind tunnels]."

Rather than create an eyesore, the walls could be "attractively" designed,
says Prof Tao.

He cites the Comcast skyscraper in Philadelphia - also about 300m high, and
built with a reinforced glass exterior.

"Our tornado wall could even be built of glass too. It could be a beautiful
landmark," he told BBC News.

"I spoke to some architects and they said it's possible. It would take a
few years to finish the walls but we could build them in stages."

Prof Tao has yet to approach government or environmental agencies with his
scheme, but the reaction from meteorologists has been highly sceptical.

Harold Brooks, of the National Severe Storms Laboratory, said the great
walls "simply wouldn't work".

He told USA Today that tornadoes still occur in parts of Oklahoma, Arkansas
and Missouri despite east-west hill ranges similar in size to Prof Tao's
proposed barriers.

'Poorly conceived'

Another leading tornado expert, Prof Joshua Wurman of the Center for Severe
Weather Research, was equally dismissive of Prof Tao's proposal.

"Everybody I know is of 100% agreement - this is a poorly conceived idea,"
he told BBC News.

"From what I can gather his concept of how tornadoes form is fundamentally
flawed. Meteorologists cringe when they hear about 'clashing hot and cold
air'. It's a lot more complicated than that."

Though much of the blame does lie with warm air rushing north from the Gulf
of Mexico, stopping it would be nigh on impossible, Prof Wurman says.

"Perhaps if he built his barrier on the scale of the Alps - 2,000-3,000m
(9,800ft) high, it would disrupt it," he says.

"But clearly that would also cause a drastic change in climate."

And there lies the real crux of the problem, says Prof Wurman. Any
geoengineering scheme powerful enough to eliminate tornadoes would also by
definition have catastrophic side effects.

"The cure could be worse than the disease," he told BBC News.

"So the solution to tornadoes is not trying to get rid of them.

"It's better predictions and warnings so people can get out of way. Better
homes. Better shelters."

He added: "Don't get me wrong, I'm open to new ideas. I consider myself an
out-of-the-box thinker. But just because an idea is heretical, doesn't mean
it's a good one."

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to