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Seasonal advance of intense tropical cyclones in a warming climate

Earth Sciences

Seasonal advance of intense tropical cyclones in a warming climate

K. Shan, Y. Lin, et al.

This groundbreaking study conducted by Kaiyue Shan, Yanluan Lin, Pao-Shin Chu, Xiping Yu, and Fengfei Song uncovers a startling seasonal shift in intense tropical cyclones, advancing earlier than ever due to climate change. Discover how this could exacerbate the impact of extreme weather events across the globe.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Intense tropical cyclones (TCs), which often peak in autumn, have destructive impacts on life and property, making it crucial to determine whether any changes in intense TCs are likely to occur. Here, we identify a significant seasonal advance of intense TCs since the 1980s in most tropical oceans, with earlier-shifting rates of 3.7 and 3.2 days per decade for the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, respectively. This seasonal advance of intense TCs is closely related to the seasonal advance of rapid intensification events, favoured by the observed earlier onset of favourable oceanic conditions. Using simulations from multiple global climate models, large ensembles and individual forcing experiments, the earlier onset of favourable oceanic conditions is detectable and primarily driven by greenhouse gas forcing. The seasonal advance of intense TCs will increase the likelihood of intersecting with other extreme rainfall events, which usually peak in summer, thereby leading to disproportionate impacts.
Publisher
Nature
Published On
Sep 27, 2023
Authors
Kaiyue Shan, Yanluan Lin, Pao-Shin Chu, Xiping Yu, Fengfei Song
Tags
tropical cyclones
seasonal advance
climate change
greenhouse gas forcing
extreme rainfall
ocean conditions
weather patterns
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