New Yorkers only know the tip of the iceberg about Hurricane Florence
Hurricane dwarfs Katrina in size and few in New York know
According to the Pensacola News Journal .com now Hurricane Florence “has changed little in intensity today. Maximum sustained winds remain near 50 mph. However, the system has become much larger than it was yesterday. Yesterday, tropical storm force winds extended 260 miles away from the center. Today, that distance has increased to 405 miles according to the National Hurricane Center. This dwarfs Katrina in size and is comparable to Wilma after it impacted the NW Bahamas. It is likely that Florence will continue to expand significantly during the next several days according to the global forecast models. It is likely that Florence will wind up as one of the world's largest tropical cyclones before all is said and done".
The New York Times to date has refused to inform its readers of the scale of hurricane Florence. One could drive from New York City to Washington and back and still be in hurricane Florence!
The New York Times readership is not informed about the dangerous of Florence tracking over the superheated of Gulfstream, with Saharan Dust as it passes Bermuda. Saharan dust is in the air, the thunderstorm anvils created by Florida’s convective thunderstorms tends to be a little smaller in area, but they tend to be better organized and thicker. This affects the amount of incoming sunlight and warmth reaching the ground, which can have effects on long-term climate.
The New York Times hides from its readers the fact that the Gulf of Mexico, where a layer of deep, warm water called the Loop Current Eddy is circling extends at this time of year into the Atlantic Ocean, offering the chance that some hurricane like Florence could explode in strength as it passes overhead. He writes: The new eddy is similar in heat content and only about 25% smaller in size than the eddy that fueled the intensification of Katrina and Rita in 2005.
The high-risk oil lobby Florence crisis plan is driven by oil companies fears of what another Katrina could do to hundred of billion of dollars of deep-sea oil infrastructure in the Gulf of Mexico. Katrina cost over 60 billion dollars in infrastructure destruction last year alone.Even after failing to send hurricane John out to sea, the US Space Command, Homeland Security and NAAO have been forced by the oil lobby to try and enlist segments of the northern American weather community and major media CBS, FOX News and CNNN in a proactive high risk plan to knowing risk bring hurricane Florence potentially to New Jersey-New York city metropolitan region.
One of “Achilles’heels” of the US Space Command Florence turning Plan, like the Baja plan of Stormgfury seeding is that the hurrican John has demonstrated the limitiations storm modification both in term of degrading powerful storms and and appearent diffucltly in terms of steering the storm on a micro level. At full forces, hurricane Florence will seek to move westward, if it makes it pass North Carlina, the Philadephia-New York region would become it primary land zone. Strong hurricanes like Katrina, Rita and John have demonstrated the limits of the US Space Command steering and strom management.
Keeping Florence out of the New Jersey-New York Jet stream and C02 enriched Mississippi Plume belt, now at both its maxuim extension and heat levels off the East Coast may be beyond US Space Command operational limits.
According to the New York Times…”Hurricanes are often imbedded in weak steering wind, which can lead to meandering paths. A hurricane (as in the case of John) can change markedly because of complex interactions among the thunder storms that swirl around the eye.” There remains a immediate dangerous given the warm temperatures and high concentrations of C02 enriched Mississippi Plume like belt of toxic chemical waste that now extend north all the way to to New York that the hurrciane could reconstitute as a powerful hurricane alone the Rita growth model and reach Hudson Bay.
Yesterday, Florence hurricane force winds extended 260 miles away from the center. Today, that distance has increased to 405 miles according to the National Hurricane Center. This dwarfs Katrina in size and is comparable to Wilma after it impacted the NW Bahamas.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home