WASHINGTON — Typhoons that slam into land in the northwestern Pacific — especially the biggest tropical cyclones of the bunch — have gotten considerably stronger since the 1970s, a new study concluded.
Overall, landfalling Asian typhoon intensity has increased by about 12 percent in nearly four decades. But the change is most noticeable for storms with winds of 130 mph or more, those in categories 4 and 5. Since 1977, they’ve gone from a once-a-year occurrence to four times a year, according to a study earlier this month in the journal Nature Geoscience.
These are storms such as Lionrock that in August killed at least 17 people, about half of them elderly residents of a Japanese nursing home, and Haiyan — one of the strongest storms on record, killing more than 6,000 people in the Philippines in 2013.
Study lead author Wei Mei, a climate scientist at the University of North Carolina, connected the strengthening of these storms to warmer seawater near the coasts. That provides more fuel for the typhoons. Along much of the Asian coast, water has warmed by nearly 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit since the late 1970s. Mei didn’t study why the water is warming, but said it is probably due to a combination of natural local weather phenomena and warming from the burning of fossil fuels.