HughJareolas t1_ixb4p25 wrote on November 22, 2022 at 2:55 AM Reply to comment by PolymerSledge in A warmer world is making storms transform rapidly into powerful hurricanes or typhoons in a single day, posing a huge challenge to weather forecasters. Stronger storms disproportionately risk lives and devastate homes and businesses, as Hurricane Ian did in Florida in September 2022. by Wagamaga No, because there’s always more warm ocean water to feed storms in the tropics and Caribbean. The main way they dissipate is getting “starved” over land or making their way north to cooler water in the upper Atlantic Permalink Parent 2
HughJareolas t1_ixb4p25 wrote
Reply to comment by PolymerSledge in A warmer world is making storms transform rapidly into powerful hurricanes or typhoons in a single day, posing a huge challenge to weather forecasters. Stronger storms disproportionately risk lives and devastate homes and businesses, as Hurricane Ian did in Florida in September 2022. by Wagamaga
No, because there’s always more warm ocean water to feed storms in the tropics and Caribbean. The main way they dissipate is getting “starved” over land or making their way north to cooler water in the upper Atlantic