Op-Ed: Hurricane Ian and the coming climate crash
Hurricane Ian, a Category 4 storm with a winds of 165 km/h (105 mph) and a central pressure of 946 hPa, and this is exactly what the climate models are predicting.
Hurricane Ian, a Category 4 storm with a winds of 165 km/h (105 mph) and a central pressure of 946 hPa, and this is exactly what the climate models are predicting.
The storms are predicted to make landfall near the northern coast of South Korea on August 12. According to the Korea Meteorological Administration, the highest wind gust of the storm was at 170 km/h (106 mph), the strongest typhoon on record.
All the models predict a direct collision and a landfall over the ocean, a rare phenomenon for a tropical cyclone that is forecast to arrive over the peninsula.
The winds are fierce, with the highest wind gust recorded at 170 km/h (106 mph) and the strongest typhoon ever. The storm is predicted to make landfall near the northern coast of South Korea on August 12. According to the Korea Meteorological Administration, the highest wind gust of the storm was at 170 km/h (106 mph), the strongest typhoon on record.
These hurricanes, tropical storms, and typhoons are predicted to make landfall over the northern coast of the Korean Peninsula.
The winds are fierce, with the highest wind gust recorded at 170 km/h (106 mph) and the strongest typhoon on record. The storm is predicted to make landfall near the northern coast of South Korea on August 12. According to the Korea Meteorological Administration, the highest wind gust of the storm was at 170 km/h (106 mph), the strongest typhoon on record.
The high winds are forecast to force the ocean into a gigantic storm surge with the potential to wreak havoc with the Korean peninsula, leaving hundreds of thousands of people homeless or forced to evacuate.