Control the path and power of hurricanes like Milton? Forget it,
scientists say
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[October 08, 2024]
By MELINA WALLING and SETH BORENSTEIN
Hurricanes are humanity’s reminder of the uncontrollable, chaotic power
of Earth’s weather.
Milton’s powerful push toward Florida just days after Helene devastated
large parts of the Southeast likely has some in the region wondering if
they are being targeted. In some corners of the internet, Helene has
already sparked conspiracy theories and disinformation suggesting the
government somehow aimed the hurricane at Republican voters.
Besides discounting common sense, such theories disregard weather
history that shows the hurricanes are hitting many of the same areas
they have for centuries. They also presume an ability for humans to
quickly reshape the weather far beyond relatively puny efforts such as
cloud seeding.
“If meteorologists could stop hurricanes, we would stop hurricanes,”
Kristen Corbosiero, a professor of atmospheric and environmental
sciences at the University at Albany. “If we could control the weather,
we would not want the kind of death and destruction that’s happened.”
Here’s a look at what humans can and can’t do when it comes to weather:
The power of hurricanes, heightened by climate change
A fully developed hurricane releases heat energy that is the equivalent
of a 10-megaton nuclear bomb every 20 minutes — more than all the energy
used at a given time by humanity, according to National Hurricane Center
tropical analysis chief Chris Landsea.
And scientists are now finding many ways climate change is making
hurricanes worse, with warmer oceans that add energy and more water in
the warming atmosphere to fall as rain, said Chris Field, director of
the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment.
“The amount of energy a hurricane generates is insane,” said Colorado
State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach. It’s the height of
human arrogance to think people have the power to change them, he said.
But that hasn't stopped people from trying, or at least thinking about
trying.
Historical efforts to control hurricanes have failed
Jim Fleming of Colby College has studied historical efforts to control
the weather and thinks humans have nowhere near the practical technology
to get there. He described an attempt in 1947 in which General Electric
partnered with the U.S. military to drop dry ice from Air Force jets
into the path of a hurricane in an attempt to weaken it. It didn't work.
“The typical science goes like understanding, prediction and then
possibly control,” Fleming said, noting that the atmosphere is far more
powerful and complex than most proposals to control it. “It goes back
into Greek mythology to think you can control the powers of the heavens,
but also it's a failed idea.”
In the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, the federal government briefly tried
Project STORMFURY. The idea was to seed a hurricane to replace its
eyewall with a larger one that would make the storm bigger in size but
weaker in intensity. Tests were inconclusive and researchers realized if
they made the storm larger, people who wouldn’t have been hurt by the
storm would now be in danger, which is an ethical and liability problem,
the project director once said.
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Debris surrounds the Faraway Inn Cottages and Motel in the aftermath
of Hurricane Helene, in Cedar Key, Fla., Sept. 27, 2024. (AP
Photo/Stephen Smith, File)
For decades, the National Hurricane Center and its parent agency,
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, have been asked
about nuclear-bombing a hurricane. But the bombs aren't powerful
enough, and it would add the problem of radioactive fallout,
Corbosiero said.
Bringing cooling icebergs or seeding or adding water-absorbing
substances also are ideas that just don’t work, NOAA scientists
said.
Climate change begets engineering — and lots of questions
Failed historical attempts to control hurricanes differ somewhat
from some scientists' futuristic ideas to combat climate change and
extreme weather. That's because instead of targeting individual
weather events, modern geoengineers would operate on a larger scale
— thinking about how to reverse the broad-scale damage humans have
already done to the global climate by emitting greenhouse gases.
Scientists in the field say one of the most promising ideas they see
based on computer models is solar geoengineering. The method would
involve lofting aerosol particles into the upper atmosphere to
bounce a tiny bit of sunlight back into space, cooling the planet
slightly.
Supporters acknowledge the risks and challenges. But it also "might
have quite large benefits, especially for the world’s poorest," said
David Keith, a professor at the University of Chicago and founding
faculty director of the Climate Systems Engineering initiative.
Two years ago, the largest society of scientists who work on climate
issues, the American Geophysical Union, announced it was forming an
ethics framework for “climate intervention."
Some scientists warn that tinkering with Earth’s atmosphere to fix
climate change is likely to create cascading new problems.
Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann
expressed worries on the ethics framework that just talking about
guidelines will make the tinkering more likely to occur in the real
world, something that could have harmful side effects.
Field, of Stanford, agreed that the modeling strongly encourages
that geoengineering could be effective, including at mitigating the
worst threats of hurricanes, even if that's decades away. But he
emphasized that it's just one piece of the best solution, which is
to stop climate change by cutting greenhouse gas emissions.
“Whatever else we do, that needs to be the core set of activities,”
he said.
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