September 17, 2005

More on Hurricanes and Global Warming

In the comments to my post on the misleading headlines trying to tie Anthropogenic Global Warming to Hurricanes, there was a comment I wanted to address. Dean over at Today's Democracy has a post looking at data on hurricanes over time. He even has a nifty chart.

A quick glance would make it look like the claim that global warming is responsible for hurricanes is problematic. After all, there are fewer storms right? Well, yeah, but that is what this research also noted. The research has claimed that while the total number of storms has declined (slightly), the severity of the storms has increased...or more accurately that the number of severe storms has increased. So this isn't inconsistent with Dean's data.

Another problem with Dean's data is that it looks at only those hurricane's that strike the U.S. while the research in question looks at hurricane's on a global scale (yes, I know hurricanes in other parts of the world are called typhoons and cyclones), but apparently what is actually going on is pretty much the same. So it is problematic to use a subset of the global data to make statements at the global level.

Now all that being said, there are still some reasons to doubt that Katrina is a product of global warming. First, hurricane frequency and severeity is cyclical. Apparently back in the 1920's hurricanes were pretty bad. Was that global warming too? I have read that hurricane's come in a 20 to 30 year cycle as well. Could that be part of what is going on? One of the things I have noticed about scientists engaged in global warming research is that they seem to love simple linear trend statistical models. The problem is that if the data you are looking at is cyclical and you don't have a long enough time span you could get a spurious trend (that is fancy talk for finding a trend that doesn't exist). The following pictures demonstrates the problem.

Only with a long enough time series can you spot this problem unless you have soem reason before hand to suspect a cycle. Further, cycles may not be nice and periodic like the ones in the graph. El Nino is cyclic, but its periodicity is not well behaved like the sine function above. Same thing with the economy.

Another problem with simple linear trends is when there is autocorrelation present in the data. Autocorrelation (a.k.a. serial correlation) is when the error term in the current period is related to the error term in the previous term (actually this is called first order autocorrelation, and yes there is higher orders of autocorrelation). In this case, one can get a trend that is spurious as well. The following picture demonstrates this problem,

So the tendency to use the simple linear trend to show percieved trends in the data to members of the media and public could very well be misleading. Sure it makes for nice and simple to understand discussion, but the real process underlying what is actually going on is being hidden, in short it has the potential to be misleading.

Another problem is that while there are hypotheses that are being put forward and developed that deal with the impact of global warming on hurricanes, it is somewhat suspicious to think that warming that is going to happen in say another 40 to 50 years is driving hurricanes today. As far as I know, hurricanes are not forward looking. Instead of anthropogenic global warming, this strikes me as anthropomorphic global warming.

So I think out of all the people who worked on the recent research the best comments are from professor Peter Webster,

"But we don’t know a lot about how evaporation from the oceans’ surface works when the winds get up to around 100 miles per hour, as they do in hurricanes," said Webster, who adds that this physical understanding will be crucial to connecting trends in hurricane intensity to overall climate change.

"If we can understand why the world sees about 85 named storms a year and not, for example, 200 or 25, then we might be able to say that what we’re seeing is consistent with what we’d expect in a global warming scenario. Without this understanding, a forecast of the number and intensity of tropical storms in a future warmer world would be merely statistical extrapolation."

As well as the comments of Jay Fein,

"Basic physical reasoning and climate model simulations and projections motivated this study," said Jay Fein, director of NSF’s climate and large scale dynamics program, which funded the research. "These results will stimulate further research into the complex natural and anthropogenic processes influencing these tropical cyclone trends and characteristics."

Or in short: Interesting result, there may be a relationship with global warming, but we need to do lots more research before we can speak with any degree of certainty on the subject.

Posted by Steve at September 17, 2005 11:12 AM | TrackBack
Comments

Excellent post. Calling out the material issues that a serious thinker should consider before selcting a dogmatic belief

Posted by: bernie on September 18, 2005 11:34 AM

Does doing autocorrelation cause you to go blind?

Posted by: Ron on September 19, 2005 10:21 AM
Post a comment