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Science Technology

Controlling Hurricanes? 795

Phil Shapiro writes "With the cost of hurricane Katrina running as high as $100 billion, the thought of trying to control the severity of hurricanes should be mulled. Dissipating the energy of hurricanes as they're forming might be within the range of the feasible. Scientific American tackles this topic in an article last year, as does this crank. (I admit the crank is me.) Is this type of thing feasible, or is it best not even tried at all?"
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Controlling Hurricanes?

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  • your idea (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward
    blows, it really blows
    • by ihatewinXP ( 638000 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @10:18AM (#13538048)
      This article made me think of an oft neglected factoid between the United States and Russia. Oddly enough in the official Anti-Ballistic-Missile-Treaty there is a clause that states that America is not allowed to use / deploy their weather changing weapons including HAARP against the old Soviet Union.
      There is also a UN treaty circa 1976 that basically says the same thing but in more general terms, while again naming the US and Russia.
      Now I hate to be 'that guy' but knowing that in all the: legalese, time, preperation, and double checking that went into the ABM treaty that the inclusion of a weather weapon cant be purely speculative or coincidental.

      Ok, im taking off the tinfoil hat now (but it does make me wonder sometimes why Bush is so sure that global wearming isnt due to greenhouse gas emission.....)
      • ihatewinXP wrote:

        Oddly enough in the official Anti-Ballistic-Missile-Treaty there is a clause that states that America is not allowed to use / deploy their weather changing weapons including HAARP against the old Soviet Union.
        There is also a UN treaty circa 1976 that basically says the same thing but in more general terms, while again naming the US and Russia.
        Now I hate to be 'that guy' but knowing that in all the: legalese, time, preperation, and double checking that went into the ABM treaty that the i

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 12, 2005 @05:36AM (#13536366)
    This strikes me as the perfect segue from Bad Science in the Press.

              -ShadowRanger
    • by Analogy Man ( 601298 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @08:12AM (#13537129)
      I second this one! My favorite test question of all time (from graduate school) estimate the power of a thunderstorm, express your answer in race car engines would serve to highlight the impracticality of this nonsense. If I recall correctly, a 10km wide thunderstorm would have the power of many millions of racecars. A hurricane is as much as 100 times the scale and power goes by volume so...1,000,000 times one thunderstorm....thats thousands of trillions of race car engines of power!!!

      Whatever chemical/physical jujitsu you want to try a "reasonableness test" isn't passed with this.

      So from a human perspective it would be pissing in the wind trying to change a hurricane. You might as well have the population near the gulf coast go to the beach and yell and the storms to stay away.

  • Global Impact (Score:3, Insightful)

    by nicc777 ( 614519 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @05:37AM (#13536370) Homepage Journal
    What would the global impact be? Are we not trying to control something which is not ment to be controled? We don't even understand global warning 100% yet, now we want to do this?

    I would rather concentrate on building technology and common sense (don't build a city below water level - for example).

    My 2c

    PS: My prayers still go out to all victims of natural disasters - I can't imagine being in that situation. May God bless you all!
    • Re:Global Impact (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gowen ( 141411 ) <gwowen@gmail.com> on Monday September 12, 2005 @05:55AM (#13536432) Homepage Journal
      Are we not trying to control something which is not ment to be controled?
      Nothing is *meant* to be controlled [or at least "meant" by whom?]. The Creator? Hell, everytime we put up a brolly we are interrupting rain the Mother Nature "meant" to drop on our heads...
    • Re:Global Impact (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Itchy Rich ( 818896 )

      What would the global impact be? Are we not trying to control something which is not ment to be controled? We don't even understand global warning 100% yet, now we want to do this?

      That's a very good question. Every action has consequences and we need to understand what they are before acting. I wouldn't say "wasn't meant to be controlled" though, who's to say what our noodly master 'meant' us to do?

      I would rather concentrate on building technology and common sense (don't build a city below water lev

    • Re:Global Impact (Score:5, Interesting)

      by cnelzie ( 451984 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @05:58AM (#13536444) Homepage
      I just want to know how this would affect the "Hurricane Rains" those of us in the MidWest recieve from hurricanes that form in the Gulf.

          Without those hurricanes, how will we get those rains?
      • Suggested (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Mark_MF-WN ( 678030 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @06:58AM (#13536683)
        The full article suggests that the first testbed for the technology would be enhancing rainfall. It is to be assumed that this would mean enhancing rainfall in areas that don't get enough of it -- the American midwest, drought-stricken areas of Africa, etc. Realistically, that would probably help more people overall than hurricane prevention, although hurricane prevention would probably win as far as preventing property damage goes. It's hard to argue with the idea of keeping the world's breadbaskets well hydrated, am I right?
    • Re:Global Impact (Score:5, Insightful)

      by lthown ( 737539 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @06:08AM (#13536489)
      Agreed. That's the first thing I thought when I read the headline. It's sort of like how we don't like the icky nasty river overflowing and messing up our farms that we decided to make right next to the river because the best soil is there due to the ovious fact that the river overflows and deposits nice rich silt there. So we build Dams (Aswan on the nile) or levees (lower Misissippi) and everything is hunky dory until the river delta starts to go away. In the case of New Orleans it caused the city ro sink, the delta to disappear and ultimately removed its only defense (I just read a interesting piece from 2002 about what's going to happen in a few years if it doesn't get fixed - surprise it happened just like they predicted). Anyway, rather than messing up the normal cycle why not get out of nature's way and let it do its thing. That means dealing with the normal flooding , fires, hurricanes, tornados and other disasters. This stuff isn't new folks! Hurricanes aren't a new development that suddenly appeared because of global warming or sunspots or migrating birds. It's a natural process and a way for the atmosphere to expend energy. Oddly enough it reminds me of parents who want their precious little darling to have everything they didn't have when growing up so the kid never learns anything. "do not deny your children the experiences that made you who you are" - spoken by a very wise person.
    • Re:Global Impact (Score:5, Insightful)

      by kfg ( 145172 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @06:09AM (#13536493)
      We don't even understand global warning 100% yet, now we want to do this?

      Oh, I don't know. I think I understand it pretty well. The sun does it. To prevent hurricanes just put out the sun. This may raise some side issues, but I'm sure that sometime in the future technology will be able to deal with those.

      . . .don't build a city below water level. . .

      On the delta of one of the world's great flooding rivers in the hurricane belt. It's the confluence of the three factors that really causeses the trouble. We're not likely to see similar events in the Netherlands or Death Valley.

      I wrote a post about the similar problems faced by Bangledesh a few years ago. Since the problems faced by that country are largely geographical in origin the world can send them aid year after year for all eternity and nothing will ever change. Of course there the problem is also political. In the old days, when the country was simply a region of India, the peasanst would come down from the hills in the spring, plant their rice, go back up hill when flood season started, and come back to harvest the rice when the floods had receded. Now they've placed an international frontier right where the high ground starts.

      The Big Easy doesn't have that problem. It exists where it exists for perfectly legitimate reasons and will be rebuilt because it has to be, but most of the people in the area aren't there for that reason and the people who are should go uphill when the prevailing conditions make such a wise move.

      Doctor, it hurts my city when the volcano blows up. . .

      There is a simpler, easier, and more cost effective way of dealing with the above than putting out the volcano.

      KFG
      • Oh, I don't know. I think I understand it pretty well. The sun does it.



        No, no, no. The atmosphere does it. See the temperature difference between Mercury and Venus. To get rid of hurricanes once and for all, we must strip this planet of any significant atmosphere.

    • Re:Global Impact (Score:3, Interesting)

      by doctormetal ( 62102 )
      I would rather concentrate on building technology and common sense (don't build a city below water level - for example)

      You must build strong buildings, not cardboard houses. That's for sure.

      Building a city below sea level should not be a problem if you protect it properly.
      I live in the Netherlands where most part of the country is below sea level.
    • Re:Global Impact (Score:3, Informative)

      by viking099 ( 70446 )
      New Orleans wasn't under sea level when it was founded. The reason it is sinking is that the Mississippi River can't flood and redeposit silt any more.

      The Mississippi River delta was always sinking, because it's all going out into the Gulf of Mexico. The regular floods would simply replace on top what is being taken from the bottom.

      With those levies in place, though, the river can't flood, and the delta is now shrinking (I believe it's receded over 30 miles since the levies were installed.

      But it would be go
    • by dpilot ( 134227 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @07:16AM (#13536774) Homepage Journal
      How about forest fires?

      We've begun to learn that forest fires are a natural part of the forest lifecycle, and that by suppressing the normal small fires, we've really messed things up royally.
  • Get The Power (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Maavin ( 598439 )
    Could we use massive wind energy plants to remove energy from the weather system?
    • Re:Get The Power (Score:3, Informative)

      by Excelcia ( 906188 )
      The amount of energy in a hurricane is a bigger number than will fit in any of our heads. No little wind farm, or even (on our scale) massive wind farm is going to change this.

      Additionally, there is the implementation detail that hurricanes form over water, so you'd be needing to build a floating one. This is something that, what, would cover the whole tropical ocean surface, or would it be towed to the location where a hurricane is beginning to form?

      The reality is, once the air is moving, nothing you nor
  • by beacher ( 82033 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @05:39AM (#13536377) Homepage
    Jeez. This was on the news what 3 day ago? Anyway.. I don't know if this is an up and coming theonion.com but here it is - a pretty twisted [mosnews.com] article about how the Yakuza & the KGB are behind it. I give the article 4 stars just based on the WTF factor alone.
  • damn (Score:5, Funny)

    by cente ( 785332 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @05:41AM (#13536389)
    How about a hurricane *generator*.. but make it go in the exact opposite of the target storm.. now that'd be something I'd wanna see
  • Prediction (Score:5, Insightful)

    by pubjames ( 468013 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @05:42AM (#13536391)

    Perhaps we should just try to take predictions of hurricanes more seriously? Katrina was predicted, both as a long-range risk and some days before it hit. The damage would have been considerably reduced if the levees hadn't broke.

    • Re:Prediction (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Frans Faase ( 648933 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @05:57AM (#13536439) Homepage
      I understand that the risk that the levees could break was well-known, and that governments (at various levels) decided to do nothing about it. For that reason, the disaster that was caused when the levees broke, was partly a human engineerd disaster, not a natural disaster. Of course, many government officials talk about it as a "natural disaster" to avoid them being blamed for it. To a large extend it politics played a large role than technology. In that case politics needs fixing!
      • Re:Prediction (Score:5, Insightful)

        by BeanThere ( 28381 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @07:09AM (#13536742)

        I understand that the risk that the levees could break was well-known, and that governments (at various levels) decided to do nothing about it.

        It's worse than that. The levees were specifically only designed to be able to withstand a category 3 hurricane. In other words, the science/math/engineering all basically says that the levees would break in a category 4 hurricane - they were breaking as designed, they didn't just "break by chance" ... in fact there was no way the levees could really have held up to a category 4 hurricane, by design they were too weak to do so. If you have a truck that is designed to carry a maximum of, say, 3 tonnes, and you load it with 4, then it's not "random chance" when it breaks - you expect that it will break. The limitations of the levees have been known since they were built decades ago, and the dangers that they were going to break known. The problem is that nobody in power (this adminstration or previous ones) has been willing to make the funds available to upgrade the levees, on a 'gamble' that a major hurricane would not hit during their terms. The Bush adminstration gambled again, and lost (even worse drastically cutting funding for the levees).

        The politicians have been playing Russian Roulette with New Orleans. In Russian Roulette, if you keep playing, you KNOW for a FACT you're going to get fscked, you just don't know when. This is 100% a human-engineered disaster. You can't tell me Taiwan can build the world's tallest building to hold up in an area that gets many earthquakes and typhoons, but the US doesn't know how to build a levee that can withstand a category 4 hurricane? It's not an "act of God" when the world's tallest building does or doesn't fall down in a 7.0 earthquake - it's an "act of Engineering" (and funding). Likewise for the levees.

    • A $100 billion dollars would certainly pay for a LOT of levees, prepositioned supplies, shelters, and transportation for people without cars. It's certainly cheaper to prepare for hurricanes than to ignore them. (It might also be cheaper to prevent hurricanes than to prepare for them, although I find this unlikely.)

      The problem is to find a way to actually spend $100 billion on those sorts of things. Congress keeps trying, but somehow (really mysterious, this) the money keeps ending up getting spent on br
    • by syukton ( 256348 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @06:31AM (#13536575)
      Or if the Governor of Louisiana had specifically asked the federal government for certain kinds of assistance...

      She said "We need your help, we need everything." but she did not specifically request federal military support. Her press secretary said that she believed that such a specific request was not necessary.

      I'm pretty sure that there are rules which regulate the deployment of federal troops within state borders. I think that it is indeed something that must be formally and specifically requested.

      CNN.com has free video now, but it's free video that you can't link to (hardly "free" if you ask me). Go to CNN's homepage and watch the clip "Miscommunication Delayed Response" to hear the governor say to her press secretary in what looks like a rehearsal or perhaps a moment that the governor believed the cameras were not yet recording. She said on Wednesday (to her press secretary in a whisper while being recorded): "I really need to call for the military, I should have started that in the first call." These are pretty damning words to be said on tape.

      Katrina was indeed predicted, and one of the bureaucrats said "We need your help, we need everything you've got." which meant to her "send planes, trains, buses, boats, food, water, shelters, etc" but she did not communicate such requests specifically.

      And let's not forget the fact that Louisiana's National Guard are mostly deployed over in Iraq. They were not even in place or ready to help the state cope with the disaster, because the Federal government thinks they can be put to better use overseas. Let's also not forget that since 2003, the levy budget has been but a pittance due to lack of contribution by the federal government because of, specifically, needing to fund the Iraq war.

      One more thing we can't forget is that a man can make a phone call and order thousands of people to be killed instantly by napalm, but that same man cannot make a phone call and order thousands of water bottles dropped on a city ravaged by a hurricane? Think about this one real carefully: We can more quickly and capably kill our purported enemies than we can help our own citizens. Is that the kind of nation you want to be a part of?

      We do not need to control hurricanes, we need to control our government.
      • by Rob_Ogilvie ( 872621 ) <rob@axpr.net> on Monday September 12, 2005 @07:53AM (#13537018) Homepage

        And let's not forget the fact that Louisiana's National Guard are mostly deployed over in Iraq. They were not even in place or ready to help the state cope with the disaster, because the Federal government thinks they can be put to better use overseas.

        Fool - there were national guard left in the state, and the state government let them sit around. The state government was advised to preposition everything they had before the storm hit to help keep order and control post-hurricane. They did not. They heeded no warnings.

        Let's also not forget that since 2003, the levy budget has been but a pittance due to lack of contribution by the federal government because of, specifically, needing to fund the Iraq war.

        I keep wondering why it's the federal government's job to build levies in NO, a city. Nevertheless, it would have taken a whole hell of a lot more money than what was asked for by *anybody* to get the levies category-4-hurricane-ready.

        So yeah, the government screwed up bigtime... but it was the state's and city's faults entirely. It isn't the federal government's job to protect states in this situation... mereley to augment or aid them.

      • by killproc ( 518431 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @08:02AM (#13537073)

        Yes, and I think that the point is on the top of your head...

        What Hurricane Katrina exposed was the psychological consequences of the welfare state. What we consider "normal" behavior in an emergency is behavior that is normal for people who have values and take the responsibility to pursue and protect them. People with values respond to a disaster by fighting against it and doing whatever it takes to overcome the difficulties they face. They don't sit around and complain that the government hasn't taken care of them. And they don't use the chaos of a disaster as an opportunity to prey on their fellow men.

        But what about criminals and welfare parasites? Do they worry about saving their houses and property? They don't, because they don't own anything. Do they worry about what is going to happen to their businesses or how they are going to make a living? They never worried about those things before. Do they worry about crime and looting? But living off of stolen wealth is a way of life for them.

        People living in piles of their own trash, while petulantly complaining that other people aren't doing enough to take care of them and then shooting at those who come to rescue them--this is not just a description of the chaos at the Superdome. It is a perfect summary of the 40-year history of the welfare state and its public housing projects.

        The welfare state--and the brutish, uncivilized mentality it sustains and encourages--is the man-made disaster that explains the moral ugliness that has swamped New Orleans. And that is the story that no one is reporting.
        • A welfare state isn't necessary in order to have people who don't own anything.
        • by Gulthek ( 12570 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @09:25AM (#13537641) Homepage Journal
          Yes. We should cut off those parasites and let them die like the animals they are. Ticks get a cigarette...

          Yeah, hear how insane that is? BTW, cite examples of the welfare parasite that aren't from tv or Ronald Reagan's (and the conservatives that follow) old and tired whinings. Oh, wait. That's a myth!

          The truth is that welfare *penalized* people for working while on the system. But the Personal Responsibility and Work Act of 1996 took a step in the right direction and, guess what?, tons of people on welfare jumped at the chance to work and contribute without losing everything for it.
        • I sort of agree with you, and sort of don't. I think the most pernicious effect of a welfare state is the increased government power it gives over people's lives.

          I can well understand why people dependent on government might come to rabidly hate it and exhibit just the behavior you describe. I blame them about as much as I blame the woman who keeps going back to the abusive boyfriend/husband.

          But, the truth here is that given the expectations set and about government responsibilities in a disaster situat

      • by Nikkos ( 544004 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @10:42AM (#13538277)
        At some point responsibility has to be taken by the local and state governments rather than point fingers at the fed.

        1. The Mayor did not correctly implement the detailed evacuation plan. He (or his aids) also refused help from AMTRAK, which was already evacuting it's own people and equimpent and had offered to take citizens with

        2. The Gov refused to allow the Red Cross and Salvation Army (the real first responders, with food, water, medicine, and supplies already staged) into the area untill after all hell had broken loose.

        3. Neither of these incompetents followed established protocol when requesting aid.

        And let's not forget the fact that Louisiana's National Guard are mostly deployed over in Iraq. They were not even in place or ready to help the state cope with the disaster, because the Federal government thinks they can be put to better use overseas. Let's also not forget that since 2003, the levy budget has been but a pittance due to lack of contribution by the federal government because of, specifically, needing to fund the Iraq war.

        4. This is stunningly false. Funding for the levy has been higher under Bush than under Clinton. Indeed, there may not have been enough funding, but the real problems with fixing the levies were due to multiple fractured levy organizations, the "NOT IN MY BACK YARD" crowd, and repeated lawsuits by enviromental organizations. This has been going on for 30 years.

    • by Krioni ( 180167 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @11:14AM (#13538556) Homepage
      By the way, I suppose I can't blame people on /. for getting this wrong, since almost every major media outlet did: Not a single levee broke. All 4 breaks were in canal walls. Levees are massive earthworks - they aren't easily "breached" but would have to be worn away (long time) or overrun. The breaks were in the canal flood walls. Maybe we should build more sturdy canal flood walls, but maybe it should be done by people who know what they hell they are talking about, not people who don't even know what actually broke. A lot of journalists seem to think they are experts on everything under the sun. Every time I read an article or watch a report on something in which I'm even a rank amateur I notice MAJOR inaccuracies/simplifications/lies. Don't count on news-people to even get right reporting what the problem is, let alone the solution. [PS. Yes - this isn't a solution either - perhaps we should talk to people in Florida, who say that after they got hit by Andrew finally learned how to evacuate properly. Get that fixed, then talk about trying to defeat hurricanes by building bigger walls...]
  • Another worry? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Geeselegs ( 905363 )
    We are already 'customising the climate' with gloabal warming.

    What's to say that this sort of 'controlled' weather manipulation won't cause more long term damage than it'll save.

    Any manipulation to something not fully understood is probably going to cause more harm than good.
    Money would be better spent rebuilding city's infrastructure less vunrable in the first place

    This reminds me of a /. article I read earlier today: http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/09/11/171 6205&tid=172&tid=218 [slashdot.org]
  • by Excelcia ( 906188 ) <slashdot@excelcia.ca> on Monday September 12, 2005 @05:45AM (#13536408) Homepage Journal
    This is a common question and there were indeed some experiments at hurricane modification. Most of the common ideas, including some of the ones that the original author proposes, are explained it the NOAA FAQ on tropical storms in the section TROPICAL CYCLONE MODIFICATION AND MYTHS [noaa.gov].
  • The energy cost of some of these seems solutions would just add to the global warming problem.

    Far better to build houses that aren't so badly affected by a hurrcane - rebuilding New Orleans somewhere else that was not at flood risk would be a good start.

  • by Ckwop ( 707653 ) * on Monday September 12, 2005 @05:50AM (#13536422) Homepage

    No, this should not be attempted. Not now, not ever. Weather has one of the key properties of a chaos: Sensative dependance on initial conditions. This property gives rise to the proveriable butterfly flapping it's wings in China could cause a hurricane in the US. People make the mistake of thinking that if we could just introduce a tiny change to counteract the butterflies wings we could easily avoid the hurricane. This is wrong headed. Sure, me breathing on my keyboard right now may well stop a hurricane occuring in the US but I have no way of knowing this. The same errors that make weather prediction so difficult also apply to weather prevention. You can't really predict how your changes will effect the weather any longer than a few days in to the future and this makes it essentially useless.

    That's not all. Think of the political implications. Say the US was unable to stop a hurricane but could divert it in to Mexico instead. This could be considered an act of war. A hurricane's energy is equal to detonating a low yield nuclear war head every second for hours on end. Diverting this incredible destructive energy to impact on another country would almost certainly lead to war.

    Finally, hurricanes occur naturally. Even the strong ones, like Katrina, are a neccessary saftey valve on global climate. If you could in principle dissipate the energy of a strong hurricane that energy has to go somewhere and I bet it stays in the Atmosphere. It's like the fire safety camapaigns in the states where they put out forest fires all through the 60-80s. Eventually, there was so much debris on the forest flaw that when it inevitably caught fire we got huge "superfires" that were very difficult to put out and damaged a lot of property. I would conjecture that if we did somehow manage to stop hurricanes, eventually, we'd get a super hurricane of incredible strength that releases all that unspent energy. Not a nice prospect..

    Simon

  • Ever hear of Chaos theory .
    the butterfly effect in specific .(warning :Sarcasm soon to come)
    Well to summarise ..A small change in a dynamic systems initial conditions can result in a wide variations later in the cycle .
    Edward Lorenz's theory was beautifully analogised to the butterfly effect .
    so as a more sensible solution , I advise that if we want to stop hurricanes .. we shoot all the butterflies in the world.
  • Ocean plowing? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by PorkNutz ( 730601 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @06:01AM (#13536458) Homepage
    That's some of the stupidest crap I have ever heard. Ocean plowing? Wind powered pumps? ICEBERGS?
    This sounds like bad sci-fi.
    Why not use common sense, as in, DON'T LIVE IN A CITY THAT IS UNDER SEA LEVEL IN A HURICANE PRONE AREA! If are stupid enough to ignore that first peice of common sense, at least get the fuck out of the way if a hurricane comes.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Weather Modification Research and Technology Transfer Authorization Act of 2005 (Introduced in Senate) [loc.gov]
    thomas.loc.gov

    S 517 IS
    109th CONGRESS
    1st Session

    S. 517

    To establish the Weather Modification Operations and Research Board, and for other purposes.

    IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES

    March 3, 2005

    Mrs. HUTCHISON introduced the following bill; which was read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation

    A BILL

    To establish the Weather Modification Operations and Research Board, and fo
  • From the NOAA FAQ... (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 12, 2005 @06:04AM (#13536473)

    Found this interesting reply to the parent, from our good friends at NOAA...

    Why don't we try to destroy tropical cyclones by (fill in the blank)?

    http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/C5f.html [noaa.gov]

    There have been numerous techniques that we have considered over the years to modify hurricanes: seeding clouds with dry ice or Silver Iodide, cooling the ocean with cryogenic material or icebergs, changing the radiational balance in the hurricane environment by absorption of sunlight with carbon black, exploding the hurricane apart with hydrogen bombs, and blowing the storm away from land with giant fans, etc. (Some of these have been addressed in detail in this section of FAQ's.) As carefully reasoned as some of these suggestions are, they all share the same shortcoming: They fail to appreciate the size and power of tropical cyclones. For example, when Hurricane Andrew struck South Florida in 1992, the eye and eyewall devastated a swath 20 miles wide. The heat energy released around the eye was 5,000 times the combined heat and electrical power generation of the Turkey Point nuclear power plant over which the eye passed. The kinetic energy of the wind at any instant was equivalent to that released by a nuclear warhead. Perhaps if the time comes when men and women can travel at nearly the speed of light to the stars, we will then have enough energy for brute-force intervention in hurricane dynamics.

    Human beings are used to dealing with chemically complex biological systems or artificial mechanical systems that embody a small amount (by geophysical standards) of high-grade energy. Because hurricanes are chemically simple --air and water vapor -- introduction of catalysts is unpromising. The energy involved in atmospheric dynamics is primarily low-grade heat energy, but the amount of it is immense in terms of human experience.

    Attacking weak tropical waves or depressions before they have a chance to grow into hurricanes isn't promising either. About 80 of these disturbances form every year in the Atlantic basin, but only about 5 become hurricanes in a typical year. There is no way to tell in advance which ones will develop. If the energy released in a tropical disturbance were only 10% of that released in a hurricane, it's still a lot of power, so that the hurricane police would need to dim the whole world's lights many times a year.

    Perhaps some day, somebody will come up with a way to weaken hurricanes artificially. It is a beguiling notion. Wouldn't it be wonderful if we could do it ?

    Perhaps the best solution is not to try to alter or destroy the tropical cyclones, but just learn to co-exist better with them. Since we know that coastal regions are vulnerable to the storms, building codes that can have houses stand up to the force of the tropical cyclones need to be enforced. The people that choose to live in these locations should be willing to shoulder a fair portion of the costs in terms of property insurance - not exorbitant rates, but ones which truly reflect the risk of living in a vulnerable region. In addition, efforts to educate the public on effective preparedness needs to continue. Helping poorer nations in their mitigation efforts can also result in saving countless lives. Finally, we need to continue in our efforts to better understand and observe hurricanes in order to more accurately predict their development, intensification and track.
  • by marcushnk ( 90744 ) <senectus&gmail,com> on Monday September 12, 2005 @06:06AM (#13536479) Journal
    Seems kind of ironic don't you think? :-P

    Seriously though.. I think I remember reading somewhere about "sowing" clouds for rain.. and that it had unpredictable results, I imagine that Toying with events as large as a Hurricane would be like taming a pit-bull with a cattle prod...
  • Hurricanes generally don't know what they're going to do more than a few hours/days beforehand; how can we know, let alone control them?

    Look at Ophelia, for instance. It's sitting there off the Carolinas, and still doesn't know what it wants to do with itself. Maybe it'll go towards Myrtle Beach. Or maybe it'll go towards Hatteras (some days I think the Wright Brothers memorial is really a hurricane magnet.) Or maybe it'll loop-the-loop like Hurricane Jeanne did last year, and swing back just when everyo
  • Let's do the math. MAth is FUN! As I figure it, to raise water from 10 feet down in the ocean, using 100 subs, each with 100,000 horsepower, you can do 28,000 sq miles per day. Sounds huge, but the earth has an awful of of surface area. If you assume that we can narrow down the "bad" areas to plow to 1% of the earths oceans, you still can only do 2.1% of those areas each day, even with 100 subs. ANd don'tforget, the subs are each putting out over 100 megawatts of heat each!
  • Ocean plowing (Score:5, Informative)

    by skillet-thief ( 622320 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @06:21AM (#13536536) Homepage Journal
    Phil Shapiro seems to know very little about submarines, or boats in general.

    First of all, nuclear submarines are a lot faster than what he says (25 mph, less than 20 knots). Even in 1995 when he wrote the FA.

    But most of all, he imagines that a 0.5 mile wide "plow" would only slow them down by 40% -- from 25 mph to 15 mph. My guess (based on experience from commercial fishing on not from submarines) is that a 0.5 mile wide plow would slow the sub down to 0 mph (or 0 knots, for that matter).

    If the rest of his ideas are as sound as that one, well...
  • Foolish arrogance (Score:5, Insightful)

    by linuxbikr ( 699873 ) <`moc.gnirpsdnim' `ta' `gnirekcipm'> on Monday September 12, 2005 @06:28AM (#13536563)
    The poster with the NOAA information covered why trying to stop hurricanes is pointless. It's been tried.

    As to the relationship between global warming and hurricanes, there is none. Hurricane frequency occurs on a natural cycle of warmer SSTs (sea surface temperatures) in the Atlantic. This is a real phenomena that is not understood but does occur. When SSTs rise by 1 degree C on average in the above the equator in the eastern Atlantic, you get more hurricanes. Plain and simple. This rise in temperate occurs on roughly 20-30 year cycles. This is nothing new. The problem is, coastal building in the US occured during a natural "low" in hurricane activity. The intensity picked up in the 1990s and we're right in the middle of that "high" intensity phase now. When SSTs in the Atlantic cool (sometime in the next decade and head south of the equator), hurricane frequency will fall. We are talking thousands of square miles of ocean here that feed these storms. You think an iceberg and a couple of subs trolling the waters is going to affect that?

    Articles like this are so comedic. Despite being a race that has created nuclear weapons, we have nothing on Nature when it comes to brute energy expenditure. "Stupidity" does not even begin to describe the simplistic and child-like thinking that produced this article. Only human arrogance in thinking that we can solve or alter anything to suit our desires can produce tripe such as this article.

    Money and time is best spent on prediction, warning, disaster planning and recovery and further research into hurricane genesis so we can better understand how these storms come to be and how we can live with them better. And even then, it is an inexact science. People are better served by showing some awe and humility towards nature as history has shown, whenever Man tries to mess with Nature, Nature wins.

  • by lemonlimeandbitters ( 748923 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @06:51AM (#13536662)

    Just so we're clear on this: I've done graduate level work in Atmospheric Science. Actually, just for fun I'm working on my PhD right now and I've worked as a research contractor for a bunch of years. And in my time I've picked up a few useful nuggets of information.

    A couple of relevant tidbits to the topic at hand:
    1. Hurricanes are big. Really big.
    2. Humans are little. Really little compared to hurricanes.
    3. So are ships, planes, icebergs and nuclear weapon detonations.

    The question is not whether we can change hurricanes but rather whether we can do anything at all that a hurricane could even notice. I think there's a story about some crazy king-guy ordering the tide to stay out (and getting rather wet), but I'm sure that's not relevant to the topic at hand.

    nb: There is of course a side issue, specifically whether anyone other than the most flagrantly stupid people would screw around with the dominant mechanism by which excess energy is re-distributed throughout the atmosphere and what incidentally may be a major source of fresh water to the US south east. But nevermind.

  • by yancey ( 136972 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @07:05AM (#13536717)
    Seems to me all such storms, including typhoons and tornados, are the most efficient way to dissipate energy from a given area, or nature wouldn't do it that way. So my thinking leads me to believe that if we stop a lot of these storms then nature will find other ways to dissipate the energy and one of those ways could be that the energy builds up to a point where we cannot prevent it and we get a super-destructive monster storm. That or we have other very significant and destructive release of that energy, like huge waves. I say we focus on reducing the energy available to such storms, i.e. reducing "global warming".
  • Say it isn't so! (Score:4, Interesting)

    by xeon4life ( 668430 ) <devin@@@devintorres...com> on Monday September 12, 2005 @07:05AM (#13536722) Homepage Journal
    Our government [loc.gov] can't [weatherwars.info] possibly [colostate.edu] control [abovetopsecret.com] the weather [alaska.edu]!

    It's seriously time to wake up, people!
  • by CiXeL ( 56313 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @07:41AM (#13536933) Homepage
    since i relocated from los angeles to homestead, florida the site which was ground zero for hurricane andrew in 1992.

    firstly, without hurricanes this place will rot. sediment builds up, pesticides, fertilizers from agricultural runoff, etc. or just waste. hurricanes are a cleaning process and an evolutionary pressure on this area. invasive species are killed off in hurricanes easily while nonnative plants thrive. the stir up of sediment in the ocean which hurricanes then dispurse to the sea allows the coral to grow closer to the shore which is currently being pushed out farther and farther due to pollution. at least florida needs hurricanes or youll watch the everglades die.

    secondly, hurricane damage on this scale only happens once. it happened here in 1992 with andrew. it was a whole bunch of trailer parks before that. i have talked with coworkers quietly in miami who say it was the best thing to happen because it was such a dump and now everything is brand shining new. i live in one of those new complexes. when katrina came by us as a strong category 1 our complex had almost no damage at all but surrounding cities were flooded. see my pictures at http://www.cixel.com/photos/katrina/ [cixel.com]
    wood construction down here is illegal now. if the gulf coast rebuilds with concrete block (and concrete roofs) they will never have a problem again. you could throw a category 5 at our complex and it wouldnt flinch. also all the vegetation is nonnative so as much as it will get beaten and thrashed about it will recover and also not create alot of flying projectiles. new orleans is another matter, the area below sea level they should abandon.

    What im saying is though. this scale of damage only occurs once. with modern building techniques this sort of thing is a problem of the past.
    how often do you hear puerto rico whining about hurricanes and they get hit by them all the time?
  • by fire-eyes ( 522894 ) on Monday September 12, 2005 @07:48AM (#13536971) Homepage
    Senate Bill S. 517, introduced by Senator Kay Hutchinson (R-TX), on March 3, 2005 is pretty interesting:

    S. 517: A Bill to Establish a Weather Modifications Operations and Research Board, and for other purposes.

    Huh? Can this be for real? You bet: Clicky [govtrack.us].

    Also interesting, this is supposed to take effect on October 1, 2005! It has only been introduced, so this is unlikely at this point. But still the timing is creepy.

    Thanks to Richard C Hoagland's Enterprise Mission web site [enterprisemission.com] for the information. Richard is way out there sometimes, but he definately has great credentials.
  • by slappyjack ( 196918 ) <slappyjack@gmail.com> on Monday September 12, 2005 @11:09AM (#13538504) Homepage Journal
    A) People die.

    B) Things happen, we do not live in a controllable environment.

    C) The second you stop one thing from happening, something nastier will come up and take its place.

    D) Maybe messing with something as large and complicated as THE WEATHER isnt such a good idea.

    E) People Die. Thats how it works. We're not going to able to ever change that. Some of us are just unlucky enough to have to die horribly.

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