What does the new era of hurricanes mean for Canada? | The Big Story

preview_player
Показать описание
We all watched in horror as America was pummelled by two massive storms in the span of ten days, the second of which gained intensity incredibly quickly before making landfall. Many experts have said this is the future of storms in the climate era—regardless of whether you believe climate change influences individual storms.

In Atlantic Canada, it's hurricane season now, and our meteorologists watched Helene and Milton closely, trying to determine if the factors that created two storms so close together and so destructive might apply to our own Eastern coast. So what did they learn from what Americans suffered through? How do you separate hyperbole and conspiracy from calm, rational science? And is Canada ready for the storms of the future, whatever they might look like?

GUEST: Chris Fogarty, Meteorologist, program manager at the Canadian Hurricane Center
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Hurricanes now are no more severe than when I was a kid growing up in the 70s.

DeeSmith
Автор

What did it mean for Canadians in the worst year for hurricanes 2005? Or the 2nd worst year in 1933?

chrisministerofsmartarsery