Slow but savage: Why hurricanes like Melissa are becoming more common
Estelle.Bronkhorst
Tue, 10/28/2025 - 12:00
KINGSTON - Fueled by abnormally warm Caribbean waters, Hurricane Melissa exploded into a Category 5 cyclone while moving at little more than a strolling pace -- a dangerous mix that could amplify its impacts through relentless rain, storm surge and wind.Scientists say both rapid intensification and stalling storms are on the rise in a warming climate. Here s what to know.- Supercharged by climate change - Melissa jumped from a tropical storm with 110km/h winds on Saturday morning to a Category 4 within 24 hours. It has since strengthened further into a Category 5, the highest level on the Saffir-Simpson, where even well-built structures face catastrophic damage.It was the fourth of five Atlantic hurricanes this season to intensify in such dramatic fashion. We haven t had that many hurricanes in the Atlantic this season, but an unusual proportion of them went through a phase of intensifying quite rapidly, meteorologist and climate scientist Kerry Emanuel of MIT told AFP. While it s hard to read the fingerprints of human-caused climate change into individual events, scientists are more confident when it comes to trends. This may very well be collectively a signature of climate change, he said.Warmer sea surface temperatures injects more energy into storms, giving them extra fuel. But the relationship is nuanced: it s actually the temperature difference between the water and the atmosphere that sets a hurricane s potential strength, a concept Emanuel pioneered. There s this atmospheric warming that tends to reduce the intensity, and there s sea surface temperature warming, which tends to increase the intensity, atmospheric scientist Daniel Gilford of nonprofit Climate Central told AFP. Generally speaking...we find that the sea surface temperature wins out. Melissa passed over waters made 1.4C warmer due to climate change, Climate Central s rapid analysis said -- temperatures that were at least 500 times more likely due to human-caused warming.- A terrifying situation -Warmer oceans also mean wetter storms. We expect something like between 25-50 percent extra rainfall in a storm like Melissa because of human-caused climate change, said Gilford.Compounding matters further is the storm s slow crawl -- currently three miles per hour. Melissa is projected to dump 20-25 inches of rainfall to parts of Jamaica. It s this repetitive or continuous threat and existence in a dangerous situation, Jill Trepanier, a hurricane climatology expert at Louisiana State University, told AFP. It could be a prolonged surge. It could be high-level rainfall over a longer period of time, and your watershed can t handle it. It could be extreme wind speed over an extended period of time, and most infrastructure can t handle that. It could be a combination of all three. Trepanier authored a research paper last year on the subject of so-called stalling storms, finding that such events in the Caribbean typically happen in October, near coastlines.Normally, stalling storms tend to die out, as they pull up cold water from the depths of the ocean and are exposed to wavy, up-and-down winds in the atmosphere, tearing them apart. What makes Melissa unusual is that it stalled and intensified in the same spot -- a sign that the water was so warm, and the warmth ran so deep, it avoided the usual self-destructing effect. It s a bit of a terrifying situation, said Trepanier.Former NOAA climatologist James Kossin, who has published several papers on the subject, said data clearly show that stalling storms are on the rise.A possible driver is Arctic amplification -- global warming reduces the temperature difference from the planet s low to high latitudes, weakening the winds that normally steer storms like a cork in stream. But more research is needed to confirm a causal link, he said.Trepanier added that understanding the human and ecological dimensions is just as important as the physics because humans respond differently to risk.With Jamaica s mountainous terrain, torrential rainfall could trigger landslides, while heavy damage to hotel infrastructure could batter the tourism-dependent economy for years, she warned.by Issam AhmedThe information contained in the article posted represents the views and opinions of the author and does not necessarily represent the views or opinions of eNCA.com.
Tuesday 28 October 2025
enca - 4 hours ago
Slow but savage: Why hurricanes like Melissa are becoming more common
TANZANIA ELECTIONS: Tensions rise in Zanzibar with polls expected to be fiercely contested
- dailymaverickTHE CONVERSATION: It’s not screen time that matters, it’s what you do and when you do it
- dailymaverickLEADERSHIP CRISES: New leadership for Netball SA as Athletics SA suspends president James Moloi
- dailymaverickTHE FINANCIAL WELLNESS COACH: Frozen estates — how to plan for the everyday while your affairs are wound up
- dailymaverickISS TODAY: Saving the pancake tortoise, a ‘living emblem’ of Kenya’s natural heritage
- dailymaverickEEUU y Japón anuncian el inicio de una nueva era dorada en sus relaciones y firman un acuerdo sobre tierras raras
- elperiodicoLEADERSHIP CRISES: New leadership for Netball SA as Athletics SA suspends president James Moloi
- dailymaverickAlbania anuncia el nacimiento de 83 asistentes parlamentarios hijos de Diella, su ministra creada con inteligencia artificial
- elperiodicoWhy old Presidents still win: generational tensions after Cameroon and Ivory Coast votes
- africanewsEl príncipe Andrés recibió a Epstein en Windsor tras orden de arresto contra pederasta
- elperiodicoWHAT’S COOKING: Salad Days: Perky macaroni salad with mozzarella and toasted cashews
- dailymaverickUcrania sabe cómo mendigar dinero a todo el mundo y gastarlo sin dejar rastros, advierte el Kremlin
- rtDISPUTED ALLEGATIONS: URC’s disciplinary process questioned as Wessels controversially banned despite lack of visual evidence
- maverickRENEWED FIGHT: Minister Motsoaledi relaunches SA TB Caucus, reaffirms commitment to ending the disease
- maverickEl órdago del príncipe Andrés: exige la antigua residencia de Enrique y Meghan a cambio de dejar su hogar en Royal Lodge
- elperiodicoTerremotos hoy, 28 de octubre: consulta dónde ha habido sismos y su escala en España y resto del mundo, en tiempo real
- elperiodicoVIDEO: Un inusual intruso se cuela en un cosmódromo ruso y así reacciona el guardia de seguridad
- rtEl Kremlin reacciona al informe sobre los preparativos de Francia para enviar militares a Ucrania
- rtNYT: Una agencia de casting vinculada a Zelenski se convierte en uno de los mayores contratistas del Ejército ucraniano
- rtJamaica se blinda ante el temor a la destrucción masiva del huracán Melisa , que ya ha causado 4 muertos
- elperiodicoLa ITV más fácil y por 13 euros: este aditivo para diésel y gasolina te puede evitar un disgusto
- 20minutosPreocupación por la exclusión de los perros de caza en el Real Decreto de núcleos zoológicos
- 20minutosCuando tu perro te deja sin casa: FAADA defiende el alquiler justo para las familias multiespecie
- 20minutos
CABINET VACANCY : DA still finalising Andrew Whitfield’s replacement, four months later
- dailymaverick
BUSINESS REFLECTION: Crossed Wires: The stupidity of technological protectionism, or how to shoot yourself in the foot
- dailymaverick
Detenido un joven por hacer tocamientos a dos adolescentes de 14 años en las Ferias de Girona
- 20minutos
El 90% de los ictus podrían evitarse con hábitos de vida cerebro-saludables y el control de factores de riesgo
- 20minutos
Así funcionará el servicio de Cercanías este martes tras quedar afectado por el descarrilamiento de un tren
- 20minutos
Desactivado un piso dedicado a la prostitución en El Puerto de Santamaría: hay una mujer detenida
- 20minutos
¿Conducir a los 17 años? DGT, expertos y víctimas lo avalan pero ponen el foco en el tutor
- 20minutos
Sonsoles Ónega, asombrada ante los bebés reborn de su invitada: Pero, ¿cuánto pesa este bicho?
- 20minutos
La Policía alemana se incauta de cientos de armas de la II Guerra Mundial en manos de una banda
- 20minutos
Detenido por empujar y arrastrar por el suelo a una empleada de un súper que resultó herida
- 20minutos