Abstract

An Anthropogenic Climate Change Index (ACCI) is developed and used to investigate the potential global warming contribution to current tropical cyclone activity. The ACCI is defined as the difference between the means of ensembles of climate simulations with and without anthropogenic gases and aerosols. This index indicates that the bulk of the current anthropogenic warming has occurred in the past four decades, which enables improved confidence in assessing hurricane changes as it removes many of the data issues from previous eras. We find no anthropogenic signal in annual global tropical cyclone or hurricane frequencies. But a strong signal is found in proportions of both weaker and stronger hurricanes: the proportion of Category 4 and 5 hurricanes has increased at a rate of ~25–30 % per °C of global warming after accounting for analysis and observing system changes. This has been balanced by a similar decrease in Category 1 and 2 hurricane proportions, leading to development of a distinctly bimodal intensity distribution, with the secondary maximum at Category 4 hurricanes. This global signal is reproduced in all ocean basins. The observed increase in Category 4–5 hurricanes may not continue at the same rate with future global warming. The analysis suggests that following an initial climate increase in intense hurricane proportions a saturation level will be reached beyond which any further global warming will have little effect.

Highlights

  • Recent community consensus (Knutson et al 2010; Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change—IPCC 2012) has concluded that it is likely that the frequency of intense hurricanes will increase with future anthropogenic climate change

  • IPCC (2012) concluded that ‘There is low confidence in any observed long-term (i.e., 40 years or more) increases in tropical cyclone activity’, based largely on potential errors in the observed data. We investigate this apparent anomaly and find that there has been an increase in the proportion of intense hurricanes relative to all hurricanes, and that is strongly related to an Anthropogenic Climate Change Index (ACCI)

  • The results are independent of the choice of models to calculate the ACCI as can be seen by comparing Fig. 4a and b. In both cases the ACCI explains 80–85 % of the variance in the smoothed annual hurricane proportions with p \ 0.01. This finding is consistent with the sea surface temperature (SST)-related increases in Cat 4–5 and decreases in Cat 1–2 found by Kishtawal et al (2012), the relationship of intense hurricanes with SST found by Hoyos et al (2010), and the Atlantic landfall hurricane changes noted by Grinsted et al (2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Recent community consensus (Knutson et al 2010; Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change—IPCC 2012) has concluded that it is likely that the frequency of intense hurricanes will increase with future anthropogenic climate change. IPCC (2007) concluded that the current ‘warming of the climate system is unequivocal’ If we accept these two statements, it logically follows that there should already be an observable increase in intense hurricanes. IPCC (2012) concluded that ‘There is low confidence in any observed long-term (i.e., 40 years or more) increases in tropical cyclone activity’, based largely on potential errors in the observed data. We investigate this apparent anomaly and find that there has been an increase in the proportion of intense hurricanes relative to all hurricanes, and that is strongly related to an Anthropogenic Climate Change Index (ACCI).

An index of anthropogenic climate change
Global tropical cyclone changes
Tropical cyclone frequency
Hurricane proportion
Discussion
Method
Comparison with model simulations
Impact of internal variability
Comparison with extreme value analysis
Findings
Where is the limit?
Conclusions
Full Text
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