Why this year’s climate conditions helped Hurricane Beryl smash records

Past Atlantic hurricane seasons almost seem “like a foreign climate,” an expert says

hurricane Beryl

On July 1, Hurricane Beryl (shown) became the earliest Atlantic storm on record to grow to Category 5 status.

CIRA/CSU, NOAA

Hurricane Beryl, the Atlantic Ocean’s first hurricane in 2024, began roaring across the Caribbean in late June, wreaking devastation on Grenada and other Windward Islands as it grew in power. It’s now swirling on like a buzzsaw toward Jamaica and Mexico’s Yucatán peninsula.

Beryl is a record-breaking storm, commanding attention in a year already filled with record-breaking climate events (SN: 6/21/24; SN: 4/30/24).

On June 30, the storm became the earliest Atlantic hurricane on record to achieve Category 4 status. Just a day later, it had intensified further, becoming the earliest Atlantic storm on record to achieve Category 5 status, with sustained winds of about 270 kilometers per hour, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami. (As of late July 2, the storm has weakened slightly but remains a powerful Category 4 ahead of making landfall in Jamaica.)

Fueling Beryl’s fury are the superheated waters of the North Atlantic Ocean. Numerous teams of scientists have predicted that 2024’s Atlantic hurricane season would be “hyperactive” as a result of that record-breaking ocean heat, as well as the pending onset of the La Niña phase of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation, or ENSO, climate pattern (SN: 4/29/24).

Predicted or not, scientists are still agog at the stunning satellite images of Beryl, and the swiftness with which the storm gained power, says Brian McNoldy, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Miami. Science News talked with McNoldy about hurricanes, ocean heat and what to expect for the rest of the Atlantic season. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

SN: I’m looking at these satellite images, and this ocean temperature data, and I’m stunned.

McNoldy: Anybody who’s been looking at this stuff is amazed. It’s just off the charts, to be at the end of June-early July, and the ocean has more heat content than it would at the peak of the hurricane season! And we’re far from the peak.

SN: So let’s talk ocean heat. We knew, even last year, that 2024 was likely to break records. What are we seeing now?

McNoldy: This year, the whole tropical Atlantic has been warmer than average, both in terms of sea surface temperatures and ocean heat content. In terms of ocean heat content — if we’re just zooming in on the Caribbean, which is the relevant part for this hurricane — it is easily at a record. The ocean heat content now looks more like it normally would the second week of September, [at the peak of the Atlantic hurricane season].

SN: What’s the difference between sea surface temperature and ocean heat content?

McNoldy: Sea surface temperature is nice and self-explanatory — it’s just the temperature right at the surface of the ocean. Ocean heat content is a measurement of how deep that warm water goes. It can be measured in a few different ways. The data I’m processing [to analyze ocean heat trends] calculates ocean heat content based on temperatures that are 26° Celsius or higher. That’s a very tropical cyclone-oriented number — generally we think of hurricanes being able to form and maintain themselves [with water temperatures at] 26° C or higher. If water that warm is just skin-deep, the ocean heat content is very, very small. But if that warm water goes a lot deeper, the ocean heat content is large.

SN: Why does ocean heat content matter for hurricanes?

McNoldy: For storms like Beryl, very strong storms, if it were moving over a part of the ocean where the warm water was skin deep, it would easily churn up cooler water to the surface, [which can reduce its intensity]. It’ll also leave a cooler wake behind it. But in this case, I kind of doubt we’re going to see much of a cold wake, because the warm water is so deep, it’s just going to churn up more warm water. The hot waters goes down to probably about 100 to 125 meters deep. So it’s not going anywhere. Storms don’t even churn up water that deep. It’s pretty crazy.

hurricane beryl gif
Lightning sparkles in the swirling clouds of powerhouse Hurricane Beryl, the Atlantic’s earliest Category 5 storm on record, in this video captured by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s GOES East satellite on July 1, 2024. CIRA/CSU, NOAA

SN: Last year we were also seeing record-breaking heat. What’s different this year?

McNoldy: Yes, in 2023 we had very anomalously warm ocean temperatures also — not as warm as they are now, but at the time, we were amazed (SN: 8/9/23). But we also were getting the onset of a very strong El Niño (SN: 6/15/23). That at least put the brakes on somewhat [to Atlantic hurricane activity].

This year, El Niño has already decayed away. [ENSO] is in the neutral phase now, headed toward La Niña. We expect to be in the full La Niña by the peak of the hurricane season. And La Niña enhances hurricane activity by reducing wind shear through the tropics. [Wind shear can batter at a hurricane’s structure, helping to break it apart.]

SN: And that was why this year’s hurricane season predictions were so dire?

McNoldy: That’s exactly the reason why the seasonal forecasts were the most aggressive forecasts they’ve ever produced. All you can do [in forecasts] is take the conditions of previous years in simulations. But we’ve never had a year like this. It is a bit ominous.

SN: This year has kind of this perfect storm of conditions — but what about forecasts for future years?

McNoldy: The oceans are warming. It doesn’t mean that every year, we get warmer than the previous year, but the trend is obviously there. Maybe in 2025 the ocean temperatures won’t be as warm as this year. But at some point, it would be nice to get back down to what records used to be. That almost seems like a foreign climate at this point.

Carolyn Gramling is the earth & climate writer. She has bachelor’s degrees in geology and European history and a Ph.D. in marine geochemistry from MIT and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

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