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Warming likely to make cyclones more destructive than ever before

Core Findings

  • Climate change is intensifying cyclones: Both in intensity and geographic spread (into new, previously unaffected areas).
  • SSP5-8.5 scenario predicts severe global warming with radiative forcing of 8.5 W/m² by 2100, leading to unprecedented cyclone impacts.

Relevance : GS 1(Geography) ,GS 3(Disaster Management)

Cyclone Impacts on Ecosystems

  • Tropical cyclone belts may shift poleward, exposing unadapted ecosystems in higher latitudes.
  • 844 ecoregions analyzed:
    • 290 already affected by cyclones
    • 200 more projected to become vulnerable
    • 26 considered resilient
  • Recovery time between high-intensity storms may reduce drastically (e.g., from 19 years → 12 years in resilient areas).

Ecosystem Risk Categories (Based on Exposure & Recovery Ability)

  • Resilient: Often exposed, recovers fast
  • Dependent: Ecosystem shaped by regular cyclones
  • Vulnerable: Rare exposure, slow recovery

Mangroves at Risk

  • Mangroves store 4-5x more carbon than terrestrial forests.
  • Under SSP5-8.5:
    • Up to 56% of mangroves globally at high to severe risk by 2100.
    • Southeast Asia: 52–78% at high risk.
  • Even in SSP3-7.0 (moderate emissions), 97–98% of Southeast Asia’s mangroves threatened.
  • Mangroves’ ecosystem services — coastal protection, carbon storage, fish stocks — are at risk.

Modelling and Methodology

  • CLIMADA risk platform and Holland model used for cyclone simulation.
  • STORM-B & STORM-C datasets provided synthetic cyclone tracks.
  • Cyclone intensity categorized:
    • Low (33–49 m/s)
    • Medium (50–70 m/s)
    • High (>70 m/s)
  • Sea-level rise categorized:
    • Low (0–4 mm/year)
    • Medium (4–7 mm/year)
    • High (>7 mm/year)

Broader Implications

  • Madagascar, Oceania, East Asia, Central America & Caribbean at increasing cyclone risk.
  • Cyclones may strike places like the Philippines with unprecedented frequency.
  • Recovery time and resilience must be factored into future conservation planning.
  • Some ecosystems may permanently shift to new states, with no chance of full recovery.

Policy and Risk Recommendations

  • Include long-term ecosystem recovery time in climate risk assessments.
  • Implement risk-sensitive conservation planning that acknowledges shifting cyclone patterns.
  • Urgent global emission cuts and commitment to the Paris Agreement are vital to avoid SSP5-8.5 trajectory.

May 2025
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