Climate change goosed hurricane wind strength by 18 mph since 2019, study says
- Human-Caused climate change has made Atlantic hurricanes stronger by 18 miles per hour in six years, as reported in the study published in Environmental Research: Climate.
- The study found that 40 storms jumped an entire hurricane category due to warmer oceans, fundamentally linked to human activity.
- Notably, three storms in this year — Beryl, Helene, and Milton — had increased wind speeds of 18 mph, 16 mph, and 24 mph respectively because of climate change, according to the authors.
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Leaning Left11Leaning Right2Center25Last UpdatedBias Distribution66% Center
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C 66%
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