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Tornadoes and Climate Change: The Twists Ahead

December 13, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

A tornado churns up dust in the sunset light near Traer, Iowa by Brad Goddard, Orion, Ill. (NOAA)
A tornado churns up dust in the sunset light near Traer, Iowa by Brad Goddard, Orion, Ill. (NOAA)

By John Allen

The deadly tornado outbreak that tore through communities from Arkansas to Illinois on the night of Dec. 10-11, 2021, was so unusual in its duration and strength, particularly for December, that a lot of people including the U.S. president are asking what role climate change might have played – and whether tornadoes will become more common in a warming world.




Both questions are easier asked than answered, but research is offering new clues.

I’m an atmospheric scientist who studies severe convective storms like tornadoes and the influences of climate change. Here’s what scientific research shows so far.

Climate models can’t see tornadoes yet – but they can recognize tornado conditions

To understand how rising global temperatures will affect the climate in the future, scientists use complex computer models that characterize the whole Earth system, from the Sun’s energy streaming in to how the soil responds and everything in between, year to year and season to season. These models solve millions of equations on a global scale. Each calculation adds up, requiring far more computing power than a desktop computer can handle.

To project how Earth’s climate will change through the end of the century, we currently have to use a broad scale. Think of it like the zoom function on a camera looking at a distant mountain. You can see the forest, but individual trees are harder to make out, and a pine cone in one of those trees is too tiny to see even when you blow up the image. With climate models, the smaller the object, the harder it is to see.



Tornadoes and the severe storms that create them are far below the typical scale that climate models can predict.

What we can do instead is look at the large-scale ingredients that make conditions ripe for tornadoes to form.

Two key ingredients for severe storms are (1) energy driven by warm, moist air promoting strong updrafts, and (2) changing wind speed and direction, known as wind shear, which allows storms to become stronger and longer-lived. A third ingredient, which is harder to identify, is a trigger to get storms to form, such as a really hot day, or perhaps a cold front. Without this ingredient, not every favorable environment leads to severe storms or tornadoes, but the first two conditions still make severe storms more likely.

By using these ingredients to characterize the likelihood of severe storms and tornadoes forming, climate models can tell us something about the changing risk.

How storm conditions are likely to change

Climate model projections for the United States suggest that the overall likelihood of favorable ingredients for severe storms will increase by the end of the 21st century. The main reason is that warming temperatures accompanied by increasing moisture in the atmosphere increases the potential for strong updrafts.

Rising global temperatures are driving significant changes for seasons that we traditionally think of as rarely producing severe weather. Stronger increases in warm humid air in fall, winter and early spring mean there will be more days with favorable severe thunderstorm environments – and when these storms occur, they have the potential for greater intensity.

What studies show about frequency and intensity

Over smaller areas, we can simulate thunderstorms in these future climates, which gets us closer to answering whether severe storms will form. Several studies have modeled changes to the frequency of intense storms to better understand this change to the environment.

We are already seeing evidence in the past few decades of shifts toward conditions more favorable for severe storms in the cooler seasons, while the summertime likelihood of storms forming is decreasing.




For tornadoes, things get trickier. Even in an otherwise spot-on forecast for the next day, there is no guarantee that a tornado will form. Only a small fraction of the storms produced in a favorable environment will produce a tornado at all.

Several simulations have explored what would happen if a tornado outbreak or a tornado-producing storm occurred at different levels of global warming. Projections suggest that stronger, tornado-producing storms may be more likely as global temperatures rise, though strengthened less than we might expect from the increase in available energy.

The impact of 1 degree of warming

Much of what we know about how a warming climate influences severe storms and tornadoes is regional, chiefly in the United States. Not all regions around the globe will see changes to severe storm environments at the same rate.

In a recent study, colleagues and I found that the rate of increase in severe storm environments will be greater in the Northern Hemisphere, and that it increases more at higher latitudes. In the United States, our research suggests that for each 1 degree Celsius (1.8 F) that the temperatures rises, a 14-25% increase in favorable environments is likely in spring, fall and winter, with the greatest increase in winter. This is driven predominantly by the increasing energy available due to higher temperatures. Keep in mind that this is about favorable environments, not necessarily tornadoes.

What does this say about December’s tornadoes?

To answer whether climate change influenced the likelihood or

intensity of tornadoes in the December 2021 outbreak, it remains difficult to attribute any single event like this one to climate change. Shorter-term influences like the El Niño-Southern Oscillation may also complicate the picture.

There are certainly signals pointing in the direction of a stormier future, but how this manifests for tornadoes is an open area of research.

John Allen is Associate Professor of Meteorology at Central Michigan University.

The Conversation


The Conversation arose out of deep-seated concerns for the fading quality of our public discourse and recognition of the vital role that academic experts could play in the public arena. Information has always been essential to democracy. It’s a societal good, like clean water. But many now find it difficult to put their trust in the media and experts who have spent years researching a topic. Instead, they listen to those who have the loudest voices. Those uninformed views are amplified by social media networks that reward those who spark outrage instead of insight or thoughtful discussion. The Conversation seeks to be part of the solution to this problem, to raise up the voices of true experts and to make their knowledge available to everyone. The Conversation publishes nightly at 9 p.m. on FlaglerLive.

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Anonymous says

    December 13, 2021 at 9:09 pm

    Climate change has nothing to do with what happened. Why is the Left making this political?

    Reply
  2. Jimbo99 says

    December 13, 2021 at 9:27 pm

    So the effects of climate change didn’t produce a Tropical Storm or Hurricane threat in the Atlantic & Gulf this year for the months of October & November 2021 ? How do the scientists explain that ? How do they explain the average high temperature this summer was 2 degrees cooler according to my FPL dashboard ? Yep, I do monitor these things and pay attention. Maybe these tornadoes were because Biden released fuel around Thanksgiving, the increased consumption caused the tornadoes ? Then again, I don’t recall December to this point being as cold as it has been this year. Is this a longer term climate effect because of the economic shutdowns & stages of recoveries of 2020 & 2021 ?

    Reply
    • Bill C says

      December 14, 2021 at 1:13 pm

      There are so many garage “scientists” weighing in on this. It’s about average global temperatures, not those in your backyard. Next you’ll be telling us that trailer parks cause tornadoes or roosters cause sunrise.

      Reply
  3. Thank Goodness says

    December 14, 2021 at 7:11 am

    This is Not complete and accurate information.Spend about an hour doing your own research and you will see yourself.There is an average of 24 tornados EVERY year of various intensities in the month of December in the USA.Many times in areas that are baron and cause almost no damage.When it strikes a populated area really nothing has changed at all except tragedy and loss.But what a way to push a story or agenda just simply without stating all the facts relative to the story.No,not cause by climate change.The earths climate has always changed and will continue to change.It is also known that eventually this planet is scientifically doomed eventually anyway.Either by radiation/UV or the sun will eventually burn out.Unbelieveable

    Reply
  4. Timothy Patrick Welch says

    December 14, 2021 at 8:00 am

    “Don’t waste a crisis”,

    Ya I understand your agenda, but hey Mr. B. where is your compassion…Its almost Christmas.

    Reply
    • Flying bird says

      December 14, 2021 at 8:35 pm

      He doesn’t know what that word means …… he is brain dead .They weather station said that the USA was hit with a tornadoes of this magnitude way back in the 1920’s . Global warming , com on .

      Reply
  5. The dude says

    December 14, 2021 at 4:47 pm

    Nothing brings the anti science nuts running like an article on climate change.

    The science has been very clear for decades. Upended weather patterns, harsher storms, warmer where it used to be cooler, cooler where it used to be warmer, these are what the science tells to expect.

    Not regulated weather patterns that we can schedule around (like hurricanes in the Atlantic).

    It’s almost like they believe that carrying a snowball onto the floor of congress in the middle of January IS in fact absolute proof that climate change is a hoax and there is no global warming… oh wait… they actually do.

    Hilarious how they’ll contort themselves into pretzels with logical fallacies to the dullards and rubes… yet still cling to demonstrably proven failures and frauds like the “big lie” of the 2020 election, and “trickle down economics”, like a wubby that keeps them safe in the night.

    I’m quite sure that the “FPL Dashboard” is not going to be the sterling example of worldwide climate change data.

    Florida’s track record of politicizing data, or just plain hiding it, when it comes to allowing her citizens access to information those very citizens pay to collect and have analyzed, is sketchy at best, abysmal at worst.

    Stop watching Faux News, get off the Facebook from “doing your own research”, go read some real science journals. Based on the “science” coming out of School Board meetings across the country, doing “your own research” isn’t really working anyway.

    Reply
  6. Pogo says

    December 15, 2021 at 8:28 am

    @pentagon says climate change a major threat
    https://www.google.com/search?q=pentagon+says+climate+change+a+major+threat

    Never argue with an idiot they’ll drag you down to their level and beat you through experience.
    – Mark Twain

    Reply
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