Damage from Harvey and Irma was/is YUUUUUGE
but fatalities could have been MUCH worse, if their tracks hadn't been so accurately forecast, and people hadn't been so well prepared, well in advance. This was because of highly accurate work of the climatologists and scientists at NOAA and Nat'l Weather Service, among other govt meteorological agencies. These same agencies also forecast Climate Change and the problems that will cause.
That is why they are on the chopping block for the Asshole in Chief, losing approx 20% of their funding.
After 'blowing' the Hurricane Sandy forecast, the scientists at the NOAA offices in Boulder, at Princeton and around the country had a new tool — the Finite-Volume on a Cubed-Sphere (FV3) — which produces better models and helps them forecast hurricanes more accurately so that residents can be warned as early as possible on whether to shelter in place, evacuate or seek safe harbor.
So five days before Harvey hit, NOAA’s Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory used the fabulous FV3 to predict that the storm would develop a second eyewall and produce extreme rainfall across the region. Both predictions as well as those about the path of the storm were spot on.
Residents and public officials relied on the forecasts, and as a result the death toll was remarkably low for a storm of such magnitude in the fourth-largest city in the U.S. Early reports are that 60 people died in Harvey, compared to 1,833 in Hurricane Katrina and 117 in Superstorm Sandy.
Before the FV3 came online, hurricane forecasting in the U.S. was significantly less sophisticated than that of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts. It was not quite an embarrassment, but clearly sub-optimal.
In 2012, scientists in the U.S. were unable to forecast Hurricane Sandy’s path with any degree of accuracy, while the European team predicted with confidence that it was going to turn toward New Jersey.
Hurricane forecasting, as well as predicting the whole gamut of extreme weather events from droughts and blizzards to tornadoes and tsunamis, is critical for saving lives and minimizing property damage.
And the high-powered computing and data-gathering technology also is essential for understanding climate change.
Which is why the Trump administration’s budget calls for crippling the program.
Under Trump’s plan, NOAA’s budget is to be slashed by one-fifth, including eliminating programs to improve the agency’s ability to predict tornadoes and to create a tsunami-warning program for the West Coast. The budget for weather satellites — vitally important in hurricane forecasting — is to be cut by 17 percent.
While the Trump administration is laser-focused on jobs for coal miners, it’s busy planning for widespread layoffs of climate scientists who are accused of doing “crazy stuff” — like accurately predicting hurricanes.
“We simply try to get things back in order so we can look at the folks who pay the taxes and say: ‘look, yeah we want to do some climate science but we’re not going to do some of the crazy stuff the previous administration did,’ ” said Trump’s budget chief Mick Mulvaney as he tried to justify the cuts in the budget he released last May.
He attempted to argue the administration isn’t anti-science, but the evidence to the contrary couldn’t be any clearer.
So if you’re a cutting-edge climate scientist/hurricane forecaster, it might be a very good time to accept President Emmanuel Macron’s invitation to move to France, where you can do your work with decent resources and without hostility and ridicule.
If you’re an American taxpayer, you can rest assured that your money isn’t being spent on crazy stuff like hurricane forecasting. Instead $1.6 billion is in the budget for a down payment on the wall along the border with Mexico.
And if you live along the coast, oh well.
Buy a raincoat.
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