Hi Stephen--While I agree it would be easier to get them early, the
challenge is that they can generate over a quite large area (Mercator maps
make the tropics look smaller than they really are) and so it almost seems
that limiting them (except perhaps in their later stages in the Gulf of
Mexico or Caribbean) is limiting full global warming.
In addition, hurricanes do a lot of ocean stirring that brings up colder
waters. Kerry Emanuel has argued it might be that the limiting process in
the meridional overturning circulation is not the creation of cold enough
water to sink in the North Atlantic, but the difficulty of bringing cold
water back to the surface in low latitudes, and it might be that hurricanes
are vital in this process; slowing the overturning would thus contribute to
warming of the North Atlantic. So, hurricanes and tropical cyclones might be
vital. Now, he also has indicated that he has had trouble convincing
colleagues of this, so just a thought. But, it is worth thinking about
whether hurricanes are a necessary component of carrying energy away from
the equator and toward the poles. If that is the case, then what one might
want to do is to steer them away from key areas.
On the issue of not dealing with hurricanes once developed due to liability,
that has indeed been the case--but that was also when models were not good
enough to forecast the track, and so it could be argued (even if not
convincingly in a scientific sense) that even something minor caused the
hurricane to come over you and so potential legal liability arose. Models
have gotten much better at track forecasting, though not yet great on power,
so we might now be able to use models to get at the issue of whether
intervention might have an effect or not and what kind of effect, so maybe
liability might go down a bit (though one might need an insurance system to
compensate those who do get hit, paid for by those who are not hit).
In any case, I am just asking if it might make sense to think through the
idea of possible storm steering once storms develop as an alternative to
having to, for example, cool the whole southern North Atlantic Ocean. Might
this reduce damage while still letting the global system transfer heat from
low to higher latitudes as must happen somehow?
Best, Mike