I would expect that by the time we get to the end of the year and early 2018, the transitory
negative effects of this storm I think will be over and we actually will start to see some of the benefits of the rebuilding efforts in terms of boosting the economy
This correlation provides evidence that the translation speed of a storm can exert a significant control on the intensity of storms by modulating the strength of
the negative effect of the storm - induced sea surface temperature (SST) reduction on the storm intensification (i.e., the SST feedback): Faster - moving storms tend to generate weaker sea surface cooling and have shorter exposure to the cooling, both of which tend to weaken the negative SST feedback
Not exact matches
Because a hurricane cools surface water, it discourages the formation
of later
storms in its wake, providing a form
of negative feedback that limits the hurricane merging
effect.
While retailer Lisa Mattern
of Sterling Heights, MI, didn't see
negative business impact, she does believe the
storms have had one other
effect: «Many [clients] are realizing the benefit
of travel protection and an agent.»
Similar
negative effects occur with worsening air pollution — higher levels
of ground - level ozone smog and other pollutants that increase with warmer temperatures have been directly linked with increased rates
of respiratory and cardiovascular disease — food production and safety — warmer temperatures and varying rainfall patterns mess up staple crop yields and aid the migration and breeding
of pests that can devastate crops — flooding — as rising sea levels make coastal areas and densely - populated river deltas more susceptible to
storm surges and flooding that result from severe weather — and wildfires, which can be ancillary to increased heat waves and are also responsible for poor air quality (not to mention burning people's homes and crops).
Once triggered, the radiative
effects of H2O are completely overwhelmed by the
storms, resulting in a very strong localized
negative feedback.
Existing disparities between low - income communities and wealthier ones, such as high unemployment rates, are exacerbated by such
negative effects of climate change as
storms and floods, the report said.