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Tropical Storm Idalia over the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea last year

Photo: Noaa / Nesdis / Star / ZUMA Wire / IMAGO

According to two researchers, the strength of tropical cyclones in recent years exceeds the current hurricane wind scale. It categorizes hurricanes according to their wind speeds and goes up to level five. In recent years, however, several tropical cyclones have had wind speeds of over 86 meters per second, the team writes in the "Proceedings" of the US National Academy of Sciences. This corresponds to over 309.6 kilometers per hour and is beyond the current scale.

An analysis of data from 1980 to 2021 found that five storms would have been placed in the new hypothetical category six, according to the authors. All of these storms occurred in the last nine years of the data series, write Michael Wehner of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley and James Kossin of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. One reason for the increase is climate change and the associated increase in sea temperatures. This provides additional thermal energy for the hurricanes, which could become stronger.

The strongest of the five hurricanes, Hurricane Patricia, occurred in the Eastern Pacific in 2015 and made landfall in Mexico. The remaining four were typhoons, as tropical cyclones are called in the northwest Pacific region. Among them was "Haiyan", which hit heavily populated islands in the Philippines in 2013 and caused the most deaths of these five cyclones.

According to the researchers, older climate modeling showed that the risk of hypothetical category six cyclones in the Philippines region increases by 50 percent if global warming exceeds 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. In the Gulf of Mexico the number even doubles.

It has already been suggested in the past that the particularly destructive tropical cyclone “Haiyan” should be included in a category six, explains the team. "But 'Haiyan' does not appear to be an isolated case." The researchers advocate a change to the currently used Saffir-Simpson hurricane wind scale, with a category five for peak wind speeds of 70 to 86 meters per second and an additional category six above that.

A previous study found that most hurricane-related deaths in the U.S. were caused by coastal storm surge (49 percent), followed by flooding from heavy rain (27 percent), deaths directly from wind (8 percent), and several others Causes.

The researchers write that the wind-based scale is only marginally relevant for many factors of destruction. Nevertheless, it remains an important criterion for risk warnings.

The Saffir-Simpson hurricane wind scale was introduced in the United States in the early 1970s. Since 2010, winds have been measured at a height of ten meters. While hurricanes move very slowly, their rotating winds are very fast.

ani/dpa