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| Satellite view of Hurricane Ian Photo Credit: NASA |
The need for quick and “real-time” forecasting of tropical cyclones is more necessary than ever given the impact of climate change on rainfall amounts. Two climate scientists who believe this take the notion further by suggesting a storyline case study of Hurricane Ian in 2022 can be used as a blueprint for rapid operational climate change attribution statements about extreme storms. Their premise is detailed in a paper published in the journal Environmental Research: Climate.
Co-authors Kevin A. Reed, professor and associate dean of Research in the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences at Stony Brook University, and Michael F. Wehner, of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California, note that tropical cyclones such as Hurricane Ian are devastating events worldwide, endangering lives and causing damage costing billions of dollars to repair. Therefore, the public, media and governmental leaders affected by such extreme storms turn to scientists to understand more about the weather event and how climate change may have affected it.

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