Climate Change To Bring More Hail To Australia

BRISBANE, Australia — Hail storms will be more severe and more frequent in Australia because of climate change, an international study led by a University of New South Wales researcher has found.

Published in Nature Reviews Earth & Environment, the study examined the effects of climate change on hail in the future.

It found hailstorm frequency will decrease in East Asia and North America while increasing in Australia and Europe, and hailstorm severity will increase in most regions.

“We came to the conclusion that on balance, the hail threat is likely to increase in Australia, especially in Australia’s southeast including the Sydney area,” said Tim Raupach, lead author and postdoctoral researcher at the University of New South Wales, Sydney’s Climate Change Research Centre.

Current and future climate change effects on hailstorms remain highly uncertain, in part due to a lack of long-term observations and limited modeling studies.

“We need to do further study to find out exactly what we expect to happen, not only in Australia but across the world,” said Raupach.

The study examined the general expectation that atmospheric ingredients that affect hail ­— an unstable atmosphere, the amount of melting of falling hailstones, and wind shear or differences in the wind by height — would change with a warming climate and lead to less frequent but more intense hailstorms.

“We know with climate change that we are going to have more moisture in the atmosphere, and that leads to more instability in the atmosphere, so we expect there will be more tendency for thunderstorms to occur because of this unstable atmosphere,” said Raupach.

Because the atmosphere will be warmer, the melting level ­­– which is the height in the atmosphere below which ice begins to melt ­– will get higher, he said.

“So, as a melting level gets higher, hail that forms high in the atmosphere and falls towards the ground has more time to melt and may indeed melt entirely before it gets to the ground, and you end up with no hail at the surface.”

Overall, wind shear — a process that “organizes” storms and makes them more severe — is expected to decrease, but hail storms will be more affected by the other two factors.

Hail stones cover the pitch following a storm before start of play in the round 27 A-League match between the Western Sydney Wanderers and the Perth Glory at Parramatta Stadium on Saturday, April 25, 2015. (AAP Image/Paul Miller)

“The changes you can expect of these three properties of the atmosphere lead us to expect that hail will be less frequent because there’s more melting essentially in the future,” said Raupach.

But the hail will be more severe when it does occur because there will be more instability in the atmosphere which can lead to the formation of much larger hailstones.

“So when the hail does survive this extra melting, it will be larger and more severe when it does actually hit the surface.”

The review showed regional variability in the atmospheric changes leads to varying hail responses, which is why studies show increasing hail frequency in Europe but decreasing hail frequency in East Asia, said Raupach.

Researchers from the University of Bern, Central Michigan University, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, University of Illinois, Colorado State University, and Peking University took part in the study.

(Edited by Amrita Das and Saptak Datta)



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