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What caused this year's hurricanes to become so unnaturally intensified?
Climate pollution has supercharged atlantic hurricanes
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Hurricanes are becoming more frequent and intense, a trend that scientists are attributing to the ongoing effects of climate change.
Every hurricane in the 2024 Atlantic season was intensified by human-driven climate change, according to a new analysis by the nonprofit climate research group Climate Central.
“Every hurricane in 2024 was stronger than it would have been 100 years ago,” said Daniel Gilford, climate scientist at Climate Central and lead author of the report. “Through record-breaking ocean warming, human carbon pollution is worsening hurricane catastrophes in our communities.”
Atlantic waters, where hurricanes form, remained at or near record-high temperatures throughout the hurricane season. These warmer waters provide extra energy, fueling hurricanes to strengthen and rapidly intensify more often—defined as an increase in wind speeds of at least 35 mph (57kmh) within 24 hours. Nine of this season’s 11 hurricanes rapidly intensified due to climate-driven ocean heat.
What is causing hurricanes to become even more of a threat? Click through now to find out.
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