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Lessons from Fani Cyclone - Climate-risked World

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May 20, 2019

What is the issue?

  • A horrific tropical cyclone Fani made landfall in Odisha recently. Click here to know more.
  • It is imperative at this juncture to understand the increasingly climate-risked world that Fani indicated.

What was Fani's impact?

  • Cyclone Fani left behind a trail of broken homes, powerlines and infrastructure.
  • Odisha has lost years of its development dividend in one shock.
  • Nevertheless, the fact that there were far fewer fatalities in this cyclone than before is to be acknowledged.
  • Even when wind speeds crossed 170 km/hour and reached 204 km/hour, the loss of human life was contained at 41 (reportedly increased to 70).
  • In contrast, the state had lost 10,000 people in the super cyclone of 1999.

What is the climate change factor here?

  • The 2018 climate assessment by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) gives some inputs in this regard.
  • Tropical storms in the Northern Hemisphere were up, from 63 in the previous year to 74 in 2018.
  • They were roughly the same, 22, in the Southern Hemisphere.
  • The fact is that there is a big difference in these storms, as the India Meteorological Department (IMD) is finding.
  • The recent storms are being increasingly and crazily unpredictable.
  • In recent years, the IMD has nearly perfected the science of cyclone forecast.
  • But now it is learning, in real time, to change its methods and to advance its technology.

What is the recent evidence to this?

  • Ockhi which hit the Kerala coast in late 2017 took many lives and caught fishermen at sea unawares. Click here to know more.
  • Ockhi went from a deep depression in the ocean to a cyclonic storm in a matter of just 6 hours.
  • The failure to predict and warn was not just human, but because of the unnatural characteristics of such a tropical storm.
  • It changed direction; it gathered steam when least expected and became more intense and more virulent at speeds never seen before.
  • One reason was the intense heat pockets in the ocean, which changed the direction and speed of the cyclone.

What was the case with Fani?

  • As the IMD was prepared for such changes, it used even more sophisticated equipment and improved the prediction models in Fani.
  • But the speed of change was so rapid that the learning of 2017 from Ockhi became outdated.
  • Intensity - Fani intensified from severe to very severe in no time.
  • Landfall - Fani also made landfall ahead of its schedule.
  • It was to hit Odisha by the afternoon; in real time, this meant evacuations should have been completed by then.
  • But Fani landed with ferocity by the morning itself.
  • The fact that the state administration had planned and managed to move people ahead of schedule speaks volumes for the preparedness.
  • Inland - Fani moved inland and reached Bhubaneshwar.
  • But notably, it did not weaken in its wind speed there, as should have been the usual case.
  • This was strange because storms need moisture on land to gather intensity and to lash the land with rain.
  • But it was peak summer, a time when ocean storms never hit in any case.
  • It is still unclear why it moved inland and how should this be predicted in the future.
  • In all, Fani demands that India invest in the science of weather and in the governance capacity to move rapidly to avert disasters.
  • The future is even more risked and even more unpredictable than imagined.

 

Source: Business Standard

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