Wake Up Call From God! Is
Anybody taking Notice? Nature�s extremes worse than usual in US
this year
Associated Press / September 4, 2011
WASHINGTON - God is allowing Nature to pummel the United States
this year with extremes.
Where is God In all This, as Unprecedented triple-digit heat and
devastating drought. Deadly tornadoes leveling towns. Massive
rivers overflowing. A billion-dollar blizzard. And now, unusual
hurricane-triggered flooding in Vermont.
If what is falling from the sky is not enough, the ground shook in
places that normally seem stable: Colorado and the entire East
Coast. On Friday, a strong quake triggered brief tsunami warnings
in Alaska. Arizona and New Mexico have broken records for
wildfires.
Total weather losses top $35 billion, and that is not counting
Hurricane Irene, according to the National Oceanic Atmospheric
Administration. There have been more than 700 US disaster and
weather deaths, most from the tornado outbreaks this spring.
Last year, the world seemed to go wild with natural disasters in
the deadliest year in a generation. But 2010 was bad globally, and
the United States was mostly spared.
This year, while have been devastating events elsewhere, such as
the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, Australia�s flooding, and a
drought in Africa, it is the United States� turn to get smacked.
Repeatedly.
�I�m hoping for a break. I�m tired of working this hard. This is
ridiculous,�� said Jeff Masters, a meteorologist who runs Weather
Underground, a meteorology service that tracks strange and extreme
weather. �I�m not used to seeing all these extremes all at once in
one year.��
The US has had a record 10 weather catastrophes costing more than
a billion dollars: five separate tornado outbreaks, two different
major river floods in the Upper Midwest and the Mississippi River,
drought in the Southwest, and a blizzard that crippled the Midwest
and Northeast, and Irene.
What is happening, experts say, is mostly chance or bad luck. But
there is something more to it, many say. Man-made global warming
increases the odds of a bad roll of the dice.
Sometimes the luck seemed downright freakish.
The East Coast got a double-whammy in one week with a magnitude
5.8 earthquake followed by a drenching from Irene. If one place
felt more besieged than others, it was tiny Mineral, Va., the
epicenter of the quake, where Louisa County Fire Lieutenant Floyd
Richard stared at the darkening sky before Irene and said, �What
did we do to Mother Nature to come through here like this?��
There are still four months to go, including September, the
busiest month of the hurricane season. The Gulf Coast expected a
soaking this weekend from Tropical Storm Lee, and forecasters were
watching Hurricane Katia slogging west in the Atlantic.
The insurance company Munich Re calculated that in the first six
months of the year there have been 98 natural disasters in the
United States, about double the average of the 1990s.
Even before Irene, the Federal Emergency Management Agency was on
pace to obliterate the record for declared disasters issued by
state, reflecting both the geographic breadth and frequency of
America�s problem-plagued year.
�If you weren�t in a drought, you were drowning is what it came
down to,�� Masters said.
Add to that oppressive and unrelenting heat. Tens of thousands of
daily weather records have been broken or tied and nearly 1,000
all-time records set, with most heat or rain related:
■ Oklahoma set a record for hottest month ever in any state with
July.
■ Fairbanks, Alaska, hit 97 degrees July 11, a record.
■ Houston had a record string of 24 days in August at temperatures
above 100 degrees.
■ Newark, N.J., set a record with 108 degrees.
Tornadoes this year hit medium-sized cities such as Joplin, Mo.,
and Tuscaloosa, Ala. The outbreaks affected 21 states, including
unusual deadly twisters in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and
Massachusetts.
�I think this year has really been extraordinary in terms of
natural catastrophes,�� said Andreas Schrast, head of catastrophic
perils for Swiss Re, another big insurer.
One of the most noticeable and troubling weather extremes was the
record-high nighttime temperatures, said Tom Karl, director of
NOAA�s National Climatic Data Center. That shows that the country
was not cooling off at all at night, which both the human body and
crops need.
While the hurricanes and tornado outbreaks do not seem to have any
clear climate change connection, the heat wave and drought do,
said NASA climate scientist Gavin Schmidt.
Judith Curry of Georgia Tech disagreed, saying that while humans
are changing the climate, these extremes have happened before,
pointing to the 1950s.
�Sometimes it seems as if we have weather amnesia,�� she said.