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Increasing sequential tropical cyclone hazards along the US East and Gulf coasts

Summary/Abstract

Two tropical cyclones (TCs) that make landfall close together can induce sequential hazards to coastal areas. In this study, the authors investigate the change in sequential TC hazards in the historical and future projected climates. The study finds that the chance of sequential TC hazards has been increasing over the past several decades at many US locations. Under the high (moderate) emission scenario, the chance of hazards from two TCs impacting the same location within 15 days may substantially increase, with the return period decreasing over the century from 10–92 years to ~1–2 (1–3) years along the US East and Gulf coasts, due to sea-level rise and storm climatology change. Climate change can also cause unprecedented compounding of extreme hazards at the regional level. A Katrina-like TC and a Harvey-like TC impacting the United States within 15 days of each other, which is non-existent in the control simulation for over 1,000 years, is projected to have an annual occurrence probability of more than 1% by the end of the century under the high emission scenario.

Xi, D., Lin, N. & Gori, A. Increasing sequential tropical cyclone hazards along the US East and Gulf coasts. Nat. Clim. Chang. 13, 258–265 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-023-01595-7

View Resource
February 2023
Dazhi Xi, Ning Lin, Avantika Gori
Nature Climate Change
Peer-reviewed Study
Gulf of Mexico, Southeast United States, United States
Extreme Event Attribution
Extreme Event Attribution → Storms

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