NWS to Upgrade in Hurricane Areas

Associated Press

18:10 PM Jul, 30, 2006

http://www.wired.com/news/wireservice/1,71496-0.html


BILOXI, Mississippi -- Congress will spend more than $2 million to upgrade 
weather-monitoring equipment in areas prone to hurricanes, National Weather 
Service officials said.

The government's equipment for monitoring wind speed is run by electricity 
without backup and often fails during storms, weather service officials 
said. Hurricane Katrina knocked out power to much of the Gulf Coast as it 
came ashore last August, leaving meteorologists, homeowners and insurers 
without a clear picture of the storm's ferocity.

Some homeowners have been denied claims on wind-damaged homes based on 
questionable wind-speed measurements, they said.

"We've been needing to get backup power at those sites for some time," 
National Weather Service spokesman Greg Romano said. "It's unfortunate that 
it takes an event like Katrina to get the money to accelerate acquisition 
and install backup power for those sites."

Installation of the new system could start in November. But Al Wissman, the 
weather service's maintenance branch chief in Silver Springs, Maryland, 
said it will be at least two years till all systems are in place.

Researchers estimate Katrina's wind speeds along the Gulf Coast at 125 to 
145 mph. But instruments that remained in operation during that time show 
speeds far lower -- as low as 67 mph at one inland location. Attorneys for 
homeowners denied claims and scientists said many of those measurements 
should be discounted because they came from instruments placed away from 
the coast or on the edges of the hurricane zone.

"A lot of them weren't in that area. If they are, the power went out or 
something happened and they didn't record anything," said Mark Powell, an 
atmospheric scientist at NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological 
Laboratory whose team estimated Katrina's winds at 140-145 mph. "Very 
frustrating. It's actually something I've been complaining about since 1993 
when they came out with these systems. They didn't have any backup power 
and they needed to have it."

Experts said Katrina's Category 5 tidal surge did most of the damage along 
the Gulf Coast. But they don't rule out the wind as a contributing factor 
to property damage.

The National Hurricane Center estimated sustained winds of 125 mph in 
Hancock County. But there would have been higher gusts pounding the coast 
and a waxing-and-waning of winds that might cause a fatigue effect on 
structures.

"It's turbulent," said Herbert Saffir, a structural engineer who developed 
the wind portion of the Saffir-Simpson scale. "It's not smooth-flowing wind 
like you have in a wind tunnel where they're testing aircraft. "It gets 
stronger and dies down a little and gets stronger, but it's extremely 
turbulent. That's one of the things that causes wind damage."


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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