Consider This from NPR - It's not your imagination. Hurricanes are getting more severe.
Episode Date: August 21, 2025In August of 2005, Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast, leaving more than 1300 people dead and becoming the most expensive hurricane in history with overall economic losses estimated at $125 b...illion. It was also a harbinger of what would happen to hurricanes in the years to follow, as climate change would make them an increasingly powerful and a regular threat.NPR Alejandra Borunda explains how the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina spurred a better understanding of these intensifying storms and a improved storm preparedness.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.This episode was produced by Michael Levitt. It was edited by Courtney Dorning, Patrick Jarenwattananon and Sadie Babits. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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In late August 2005, National Weather Service meteorologist Robert Ricks in Slidell, Louisiana,
was monitoring the progress of a hurricane as it approached the Louisiana coast.
You know, we saw another storm thinking, you know, here we go again.
But it was going to be more of the ordinary routine drill that we've been through several times before.
Ricks expected Hurricane Katrina to be big, perhaps a category three or four, at landfill.
But when that eye exposed itself as large as it,
it was on a satellite imagery and knew that it was a five, then it took on a whole new perspective.
At 10 a.m. on the morning of August 28th, Ricks issued an urgent weather message more dire than any he had ever
issued before, describing a, quote, most powerful hurricane with unprecedented strength.
I am this morning declaring that we will be doing a mandatory evacuation, and I'm going to read
that following news that there's possibly a brief.
on the levee at Lake Pontchatrain that's pouring more water still into a city that's already flooded.
With a bunch of New Orleans now underwater, authorities are focused on search and rescue before it's too late.
Hurricane Katrina would leave more than 1,300 people dead, an estimated 80% of New Orleans underwater,
and would become the most expensive hurricane in history, with overall economic losses estimated at $125 billion.
Katrina was a harbinger of what would happen to hurricanes over the next two decades.
Climate change would make them an increasingly powerful and regular threat.
Now, in millions of Americans from New England to Virginia are bracing for a potential superstorm.
Hurricane Sandy is serious.
It has already killed 21 people.
...down as Hurricane Harvey picks up strength.
The storm is now a category three with more than 110 mile per hour winds.
It could bring three feet...
A treacherous night ahead.
for Florida as darkness begins to fall, and Hurricane Ian continues its catastrophic rampage.
Consider this. Hurricane Katrina spurred a better understanding of these intensifying storms.
Its devastation led to improved storm preparedness. But two decades after the levees broke,
can we hang on to that progress? From NPR, I'm El Cicheng.
It's considered this from NPR.
The force with which Hurricane Katrina slammed into New Orleans stunned the country.
Since then, scientists have gotten much better at forecasting hurricanes and understanding how climate change influences them.
But those scientists now fear that progress is in danger.
NPR's Alejandra Burunda is here to explain.
Hi, Elsa.
Okay, so just big picture here.
How has hurricane science evolved since Katrina?
I'll let Gabe Becky tell you.
He's a climate and hurricane scientist at Princeton.
It's been a great 20 years.
It's been a pivotal 20 years.
That's because right after Katrina,
scientists from agencies like NOAA and universities and national labs
all got together to work on something called the Hurricane Forecasting Improvement Project,
or HIP.
And the project aimed to flash forecast error for both hurricane.
track, which is where a storm is going, and intensity by about 50% within 10 years. And it absolutely
crushed those goals. Crushed. How did they crush those goals? Yeah. So they did two big
things. First, scientists needed to build better computer models of the storms. And then they also
needed better real observations of the storms, because the best model in the world is super useful
if you don't feed it good starting information. And HIPP and other federal efforts helped with both.
was mostly on the modeling side, and other agencies helped improve the observations.
Like, NOAA and the Department of Defense launched these special satellites in the 2010s,
and Hurricane Scientist Jeff Masters explains them.
These use microwaves, the same things, you know, used to run your microwave oven on,
and they are able to do kind of a 3D MRI-like picture of the inside of a hurricane.
And that microwave data helps a lot, and so does information from the Hurricane Hunter planes
that fly through the storms getting Doppler radar images
and also drop sensors down through the storm to the ocean surface.
Wow.
Okay, so all of this has added a ton of new useful information, I imagine.
Yeah, and it all adds up to big forecasting gains.
By last year, a five-day out forecast of both track and intensity
was about equivalent to a two-day forecast in 2005.
Oh, my God, that's a big jump.
Okay, well, what about climate change?
because I'm sure that has had an impact on hurricanes, right?
Absolutely.
And not only now do we have 20 more years of observations to understand it,
but the theory is also way farther along.
Here's Becky again.
So it's unambiguous that over the last 40 years, say since the 1980s,
hurricanes in the Atlantic have become more frequent, more intense, wetter.
Overall, scientists say climate change kind of puts storm on steroids.
And a hotter planet and especially a hotter ocean means storms can penetrate farther north, too.
And they're filled with a lot more water, which actually is what does most of the damage.
Last year, for example, Hurricane Helene dropped an extra 10% more water than it would have otherwise.
Jeez. So can we expect hurricane forecast to get even better in the future?
So the Trump administration has slashed funding for many of the organizations, critical to her.
hurricane science. And so there's now some concern about even keeping up with the progress that
already has been made. Kimwood puts it this way. They're a hurricane scientist at the University
of Arizona. We didn't get this far by saying, yep, we figured out hurricanes, we're done.
We have to continue investing in the observations in the analysis of those observations.
Because that progress has real value. A study from the National Bureau of Economic Research last
year found that improvements of forecasts saved the country $2 billion per hurricane because people
could better prepare for them. That's more than the budget of the whole weather service.
Wow. That is NPR's Alejandra Barunda. Thank you so much, Alejandra. Yeah, glad to talk.
This episode was produced by Michael Levitt with audio engineering by Quasi Lee. It was edited by
Courtney Dorney, Patrick Jaron Watanan and Sadie Babbitts. Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigin.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Elsa Chang.