Most Intense Typhoons On The Decline
November 14, 2013
By Paul Homewood
As I mentioned in an earlier post, there have been 35 typhoons with an atmospheric pressure of 895 mb or less, the figure measured for Yolanda.
The chart below plots these by year.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_the_most_intense_tropical_cyclones#Western_North_Pacific_Ocean
The almost total absence of such intense storms in the last two decades is notable.
13 Comments
Trackbacks
- Most Intense Typhoons On The Decline | The Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF)
- Cyclones, typhoons and cherry-picking | The IPCC Report
- Super Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan) | CACA
- Reality is Absent from Michael Mann’s Activist Article on Typhoon Haiyan | Bob Tisdale – Climate Observations
- Reality is Absent from Michael Mann’s Activist Article on Typhoon Haiyan | Watts Up With That?
- Mehr Indizien dafür, das Hurrikan Haiyan/Yolanda HAARP-verursacht ist | Der Honigmann sagt...
- Alien Thinking | Skeptical Swedish Scientists
- Le Typhon, le GIEC, les médias, l’ONU et les ONG :: RESILIENCETV
- Is man-made global warming causing more hurricanes? | Global Warming Solved
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Reblogged this on Real Science.
Interesting the planet warms to the point that the most intense typhoons dissappear then it begins to cool again over the last decade and they reappear again. It is a great shame we cannot pump more CO2 into the atmosphere and warm the typhoons away, if only for the simple reason that we have been doing that and it gets cooler!
‘ Tis a pity the AGW hypothesis has been falsified and the warmists continue to give us false hope.
Reblogged this on CACA.
That is a truly remarkable difference. If you take the first half of the period, the probability of such a storm occurring in a given year (lambda) is 0.774. The probability of having zero events happen 18 years in a row naturally given the previous rate is one in 1.1 million. If you take the first 41 years as a baseline, having zero occurrences 18 years in a row after that is about 1 in 1.95 million.