[Experts have voiced their surprise that Hurricane Irma has surfaced so
soon after Hurricane Harvey. In fact, Irma is being accompanied by
Hurricanes Jose to its east and Katia to its west. Jose, itself close to
Category 5, will be the second to hit the Caribbean islands in just a
couple of days. It’s made some raise what is increasingly becoming an
obvious question: to what extent does global warming have a role to play?
To which I would add one voiced less frequently: why should those least
responsible for global warming have to constantly face its effects? And
what does it bode for the future?
Ocean water temperatures need to cross 26.5º C to depths of 50 metres for
tropical cyclones to form. (It’s a necessary condition but not a sufficient
one. Other favourable conditions are needed, for instance the absence of
winds at a higher level that can interfere with hurricane formation.) Over
60% of the extraordinary amount of heat energy trapped by greenhouse gases
since 1971 – about 170,000 billion billion joules – has gone into the upper
oceans, according to the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report. It’s a number so
bewilderingly large that an easier way of conceptualising it is this:
averaged out each year, it equals 40-times the entire annual energy
consumption of the US. The consequently warmer upper ocean waters ensure
that, when other conditions are right, there’s a greater chance of
hurricanes forming and sustaining themselves for a longer duration. Or
getting more intense. Or them forming one after the other, as has happened
with Irma and Jose.
...
Not surprisingly, despite facing the brunt of Hurricane Katrina in August
2005, no one died in Cuba while 1,800 people were killed in the US, a
vastly wealthier country. Having said that, Hurricane Irma is outside most
people’s lived experience, so the extent of deaths and damage it may cause
even in Cuba may be considerable and will only become clear over the next
several days.]

In the Eye of Hurricane Irma Lie the Fingerprints of Global Warming – and
Inequality

BY NAGRAJ ADVE ON 10/09/2017

Hurricane Irma draws our attention yet again to something that bears
repetition: that those most affected by global warming’s impacts are the
people least responsible for them.

An infrared image of Hurricane Irma on September 5, 2017. Credit: NOAA

Nagraj Adve’s booklet Global Warming in the Indian Context has been
translated into Hindi, Kannada and Tamil. He works and writes on issues
related to global warming.

This is Vivian Richards country, with the cricket stadium named after its
most illustrious son. Where Andy Roberts and Curtly Ambrose once caused
havoc among visiting test batsmen. It’s now witnessing havoc of a different
kind. Antigua and Barbuda, the Caribbean nation where these great players
came of age, has just been flattened by Hurricane Irma, the island of
Barbuda facing its brunt. Its prime minister has said that 90% of the
island’s buildings have been destroyed and over half its small population
rendered homeless.

Hurricane Irma is one of the strongest-ever hurricanes in the Atlantic. Its
wind speed, 290 km per hour at its peak, was until recently at least 40
kilometres an hour above the threshold of a Category 5 hurricane, the
highest in the 1-5 scale by which hurricanes are graded, basically for
their capacity to cause destruction. A hurricane with sustained winds of
between 118 to 152 km an hour is designated Category 1, and each category
signifies wind speeds roughly 30 km an hour stronger. Irma was so way off
the charts that some people were (erroneously) saying it should be called a
Category 6 hurricane.

This hurricane has, over the last couple of days, powered its way through
the Caribbean sea, killing at least 21 people, and decimated homes,
schools, hospitals and other infrastructure in parts of St Martin, the
Virgin Islands, Anguilla, the Turks and Caicos islands and Puerto Rico. It
is currently over Cuba, and will shortly hit the eastern coast of the US
with winds of around 248 km an hour. It’s also massive, with hurricane
winds over a 100 kilometres from the storm’s centre. Storm surges of over
12 feet are expected to pummel the coast for hundreds of kilometres along
Florida, Georgia and North Carolina. Over 5 million people have been told
to leave their homes for greater safety in Florida alone. The people in
areas it is going to hit have no lived experience of anything so massive.

The fingerprints of global warming

Experts have voiced their surprise that Hurricane Irma has surfaced so soon
after Hurricane Harvey. In fact, Irma is being accompanied by Hurricanes
Jose to its east and Katia to its west. Jose, itself close to Category 5,
will be the second to hit the Caribbean islands in just a couple of days.
It’s made some raise what is increasingly becoming an obvious question: to
what extent does global warming have a role to play? To which I would add
one voiced less frequently: why should those least responsible for global
warming have to constantly face its effects? And what does it bode for the
future?

Ocean water temperatures need to cross 26.5º C to depths of 50 metres for
tropical cyclones to form. (It’s a necessary condition but not a sufficient
one. Other favourable conditions are needed, for instance the absence of
winds at a higher level that can interfere with hurricane formation.) Over
60% of the extraordinary amount of heat energy trapped by greenhouse gases
since 1971 – about 170,000 billion billion joules – has gone into the upper
oceans, according to the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report. It’s a number so
bewilderingly large that an easier way of conceptualising it is this:
averaged out each year, it equals 40-times the entire annual energy
consumption of the US. The consequently warmer upper ocean waters ensure
that, when other conditions are right, there’s a greater chance of
hurricanes forming and sustaining themselves for a longer duration. Or
getting more intense. Or them forming one after the other, as has happened
with Irma and Jose.

Another way global warming is implicated has to do with storm surges now
pummelling Cuba, followed by the US over the weekend. Swirling hurricane
winds pull in massive volumes of sea water. Out in the open sea, those
waters are forced downwards into the ocean depths. But once the hurricane
approaches land, the shallower seabed means the excess water pulled in by
the hurricane has nowhere to go, so it just piles up and overwhelms the
shore. What’s more, the concave shape in this part of the US eastern coast
“will funnel and concentrate the storm surge to ridiculous heights”,Jeff
Masters, a world-renowned authority on hurricanes, warned three days ago.

Of relevance here is that sea levels are on average about 20 cm higher than
they were a century ago, and about half a foot higher than a few decades
ago. But that’s only a global average. The sea level rise off the US
eastern coast is more than this average, at least a foot higher. So when
storm surges occur in this region, they are a foot higher than they used to
be, without global warming. “People think that 10 to 30 centimetres is not
much, but a relatively small average rise in sea level is manifested in
extreme high tide and storm surge events,” the climate scientist Gerald
Meehl wrote in the journal Nature in 2005. In passing, this applies to
storm surges off India’s coasts as well, including events that have nothing
to do with climate change, such as the tsunami of December 26, 2004. When
the tsunami hit, the waters off Tamil Nadu’s and other coastlines came in
higher and stronger because of sea level rise.

Who bears the brunt?

The carbon footprint of the people in the Caribbean is largely quite
modest. According to the latest available US EIA data, Jamaica and other
Caribbean nations hover around 2.5 tonnes of carbon dioxide per person, and
each person in Haiti emitted a mere 0.25 tonnes – compared to the US at 16
tonnes of carbon dioxide per capita. And national per capita emission
averages always hide inequalities of income and wealth. The poor everywhere
emit much less than the average. Caribbean economies depend a lot on
tourism and agriculture, also their main sources of employment. Both
sectors have been devastated by Hurricane Irma, and a majority of people
would have lost their immediate work and sources of livelihood.

But for now, uppermost on their minds is the damage to homes and
infrastructure that support daily life. The mayor of the capital of Puerto
Rico said that “power infrastructure is very fragile and we expect to be
without power for the next four to six months”. In a video hosted on the
New York Times, islanders from the small Caribbean island of St Martin
narrate Irma’s devastation: “The island is completely destroyed. People are
crying on the streets. They don’t have nowhere to go. There are places
where there were houses. Now there is nothing. Not even a piece of wood,
nothing. … I don’t know how many years it will be before St Martin recovers
from such a catastrophe.” Hurricane Irma draws our attention, yet again, to
something that bears repetition: that those most affected by global
warming’s impacts are the people least responsible for them. As Hurricane
Katrina did: it was the African-Americans in the poorest neighbourhoods of
New Orleans that bore its brunt the most.

The only country that has – thus far – borne these hurricane assaults
relatively well is Cuba. Authorities elsewhere, whether in the United
States, or here in India, would do well to borrow from practices there.
Having being buffeted by regular hurricanes, Cuba is now constantly,
through the year, prepared for the next one. Since 1986, every single Cuban
has participated each year in a two-day hurricane exercise. Hurricane
preparedness is part of school curricula. Citizens are engaged in this
process at all levels, each person knows where to go and there is an
extraordinary level of cooperation. Particular attention is paid to the
economically and physically vulnerable, and its remarkable healthcare
system ensures that everyone has access to hospitals both during and after
a hurricane.

Not surprisingly, despite facing the brunt of Hurricane Katrina in August
2005, no one died in Cuba while 1,800 people were killed in the US, a
vastly wealthier country. Having said that, Hurricane Irma is outside most
people’s lived experience, so the extent of deaths and damage it may cause
even in Cuba may be considerable and will only become clear over the next
several days.

What of the future?

What do recent trends tell us about the future? “It is virtually certain,”
says the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report, “that there has been an increase
in the frequency and intensity of the strongest tropical cyclones in the
North Atlantic since the 1970s.” Elsewhere, it says that “increases in the
intensity of the strongest storms in the Atlantic appear robust” (WG1,
chapter 2, p 217).

Warmer oceans have meant that hurricanes are already forming in areas of
the world’s oceans where they never did before. As hurricanes draw their
energy from ocean heat, they will likely get stronger. Only the most
thorough readiness, and wisdom, will prepare us for hurricanes of the
future. At least, one hopes. With wisdom, we seem to be in reverse gear.
Elites seek to build foolishly on coastlines, whether here in India or in
the US – coal power plants, oil rigs, tourism facilities or homes for the
well-off. And destroy mangroves to make way for these symptoms of the
“forever growth” malaise. We seem hell-bent on making ourselves more
vulnerable.

We need to not just challenge and reverse this foolhardy development
trajectory but also interrogate the underlying thought process and the
economic logic of maximising profit that make it happen.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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