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Scientists say man-made global warming has contributed to rising seas and a general increase in strength in the most powerful tropical cyclones. But they won't specifically apply these factors to Haiyan, saying it is impossible to attribute single weather events, like the typhoon, to climate change. A 2008 study found that in the northwestern Pacific where Haiyan formed, the top 1 percent of the strongest tropical cyclones over the past 30 years are getting on average about 1 mph stronger each year
-- a phenomenon some scientists suspect is a consequence of global warming. "The strongest storms are getting stronger" said study co-author James Kossin of the National Climatic Data Center. Haiyan "is what potentially could be a good example of the kind of the things we're finding." Similarly, the Philippines has seen its sea rise nearly half an inch in the past 20 years
-- about triple the global increase, according to R. Steven Nerem of the University of Colorado. Higher sea levels can add to storm surge, creating slightly greater flooding. Just as human factors can worsen a disaster, they can also lessen it, through stronger buildings, better warnings and a quicker government response. Emanuel said poverty-stricken Bangladesh had much bigger losses of life from cyclones in the 1970s than it does now. The international community built strong evacuation shelters that get used frequently, he said. "The Philippines is one of the most disaster-prone places on Earth," said Kathleen Tierney, director of the Natural Hazards Center at the University of Colorado. "They've got it all. They've got earthquakes, volcanoes, floods, tropical cyclones, landslides."
___ Online: Natural Hazards Center at the University of Colorado: http://www.colorado.edu/hazards/ MIT's Kerry Emanuel tropical meteorology site: http://eaps4.mit.edu/faculty/Emanuel/
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