More about the discussion that never seems to go away...BTW, as I write this, it's a shivering 29 degrees in my area of Central Florida...
My local newspaper, the
Tampa Bay Times, published a good, thought-provoking op-ed yesterday (11/11/2025) about having a "Category 6" in the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa, by far, the most intense hurricane in the relatively "quiet" Atlantic Basin in 2025. Please read the link below:
Is it time for a ‘Category 6′ hurricane designation? | Column
Randy, thank you for posting. Looking at Melissa and the 2025 Atlantic season as a whole, it allows me to further talk
about things and present some information one may not be aware of.
The article states:
"Melissa’s sustained winds reached 185 mph at landfall in Jamaica. Historical records show that only a
handful of Atlantic hurricanes have reached such speeds at landfall. Melissa’s 185 mph ties it with
Hurricane Dorian (2019), Hurricane Wilma (2005), Hurricane Gilbert (1988) and the 1935 Labor Day
hurricane."
Not totally correct. Wilma and Gilbert *peaked* at 185 mph over the open ocean (likely too low given what we
know now), but were *not* 185 mph at landfall. Goes to show how things are often incorrect, esp. w/ the details,
in articles these days. And in science, the details count! In this case, how strong a hurricane is at landfall frequently
makes *huge* difference as to total impact.
The article also states:
"As we continue to assess the toll left by Hurricane Melissa, one thing is clear: what we know so far confirms a
scientific trend that has been years in the making. The ocean’s surface temperature is rising and the extra heat is
fueling hurricanes, making them more powerful and lethal."
Starting an article w/ a contested issue is not the way to do it. You immediately create conflict/divide and turn some
readers off by "poisoning the well" w/ such a pretext. And the line, "as we continue to assess the toll..." What does
that have to do w/ the title of the article really? Any strong hurricane that makes landfall leaves a toll to assess. It is a
non-sequitur statement and superfluous. As if the reader does not know a hurricane leaves a toll?
Every time we get a strong Cat 5, this same, "do we need a Category 6?" line comes up in the MSM. Same recycled
story trope that waits in the journalism canned queue. How about try something original or more-thought provoking than
"re-heated leftovers" posted merely for content?
Talking about the warmer ocean temps and hurricanes in a broad sense...
When I said "contested issue" above, I need to elaborate. Yes, in a vacuum by itself, warmer ocean temps do make
hurricanes stronger, but this is cherry-picking logical fallacy or the fallacy of incomplete evidence.
There are many other factors out there that modulate hurricane intensity, and starting from the very basics, and I have
said this before, all the warmer ocean in the world is meaningless if the atmosphere does not cooperate, and this is
proven easily. SSTs across most of the tropics globally are more than enough to support intense hurricanes year-round,
but they do not happen. Not only that, most disturbances never become TCs, even during the peak of the season in each
ocean basin. This is b/c atmospheric conditions on a large-scale have to be conducive, esp. in terms of wind shear and
moisture, among other things, otherwise, no dice.
And the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season has shown an example of this. 3 of the 4 intense hurricanes all struggled for days
as lower-end TCs before becoming intense (Erin, Gabrielle, and Melissa). T his was due to unfavorable atmospheric conditions
in the deep tropics. And Erin, Gabrielle, and Humberto had to wait until they got out of deep tropics before becoming intense, further showing how the deep tropics were not favorable overall much of the season.
Some have noted of the 5 hurricanes this season, 4 become Cat 4+, and thus a larger percentage of hurricane-strength TCs
are more intense, and this cherry-picking narrative get inserted for trends in recent decades. But this is deception by math, in
this case, using only percentages. The omitted fact is that there are less total hurricane-strength TCs overall. So *of course*
the percentage of intense will be higher! It does not necessarily mean there are more intense in absolute numbers.
One thing of note is that we lacked long-tracked, classic Cabo Verde hurricanes this season, and the reason is given above.
What we have been starting to see, and noted in climate studies, is the yes, hurricanes that form have a more likelihood of becoming intense, but the number of hurricanes and their durations as intense hurricanes, is coming *down*. This has been
noted most in the last 30 years in the South Indian Ocean basin (second most active tropical basin in the world by annual ACE).
But these kind of studies do not get headlines. You'd be surprised how much literature and studies areout there on the climate
issue that don't see the light of day, and empirical observations over time validate a lot of this work.
So why are we seeing TCs struggle more/not as intense as long? It goes back to large-scale patterns and features across the
tropics as temps warm. For instance, changes in the Hadley Cell, the Walker Circulation, phases of the MJO, Convectively-
Coupled Kelvin Waves (CCKWs), the African Easterly Jet (AEJ), and so on. These impact more local things like the mean
position of the ITCZ, Sahel rainfall, Saharan dust outbreaks, the frequency and distribution of TUTTs, etc. These phenomena
are very complex and interact in ways outside of warming that we still do not fully understand, but clearly are major factor
in TC frequency and intensity. How come these factors, which in many cases do the opposite of the mainstream narrative that hurricanes get worse across the board in a warming globe, never get mentioned much of at all? Well, it's b/c it doesn't fit the current narrative, and also likely b/c from a public view, many know the connection to SSTs and hurricanes in a basic sense (they need warm ocean to form and get intense), so this an easy, linear platform for politicians and global elite to sell to the masses
to push a CAGW narrative. Glossing over a complex system is bad science.
So hurricanes get stronger in a warmer globe is valid, but at the same time, the number of hurricane-strength TC totals tend to
go down and their duration as being intense also goes down. Is that not a somewhat balanced, some loss/some gain scenario? Of course, it's not an exact 50-50 balance, but it shows that things are not as bleak/bad as they are portrayed. Yet this part of left out of the narrative. It is always worse across the board for warming temps, which remarkablely vapid and arrogant considering how complex the Earth's system is and thumbs its nose at the Earth's ability remaining stable for life to flourish for 100s of millions of years despite going through far worse climate swings and catastrophes (asteroid impacts, supervolcano eruptions, ice ages, etc.).