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Strong winds,
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deadly storm surges and a trail of destruction.
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Recent hurricanes have wreaked havoc in the United States.
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And you might be wondering, how does a hurricane work?
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So, the important thing to understand about hurricanes is that they only form over warm water.
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Think of warm water as the fuel to the engine that is a hurricane.
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A hurricane forms when warm air over the ocean rises.
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As that warm air rises, cool air sort of fills in below it,
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kind of creating that cyclonic action.
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At the top, it forms clouds, and those clouds create the rain system that we associate with hurricanes.
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So, many people are wondering, is climate change making hurricanes worse?
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Yes.
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Remember we talked about how warm water is the fuel for a hurricane?
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Because of climate change, the oceans are much warmer than they used to be.
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In recent years, we've seen very powerful hurricanes like Harvey and Florence.
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And the obvious question is, what do they have in common?
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Both of these hurricanes formed in unusually warm waters.
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Hurricane Harvey formed in waters around the Gulf of Mexico that were,
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on average,
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about 1 degree Celsius warmer than average.
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Florence is being powered by waters that are 2 degrees Celsius warmer than average.
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So that's a lot more energy going into the storm.
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The worry with Florence is not just when it hits land, but how long it will stick around, and how far inland that will go.
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So does this mean we're going to have more storms like this?
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The short answer is yes.
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The long answer is storms like this are even worse.
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There's some talk about potentially raising the hurricane category scale to include a 6 for stronger winds than we currently have.
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There is some concern or some evidence suggesting that hurricanes are moving further north.
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So that means they're going to be showing up in places that they haven't traditionally existed and, potentially, even in places like Europe.
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When there's a hurricane, when there's a wildfire,
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climate change often comes up.
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But climate change is our new reality.
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And if we don't take steps to mitigate it, we will continue to see powerful, severe hurricanes.
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And more and more people are going to be put in harm's way.