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Dial it up to 6? Stronger storms spark calls for new hurricane category

  • Scientists propose a sixth category as mega-storms get more intense because of climate change
  • Since 2013, five storms had winds of 309km/h or higher that would have put them in the new category

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Hurricane Patricia along the western coast of Mexico, as seen from the ISS in 2015. File photo: Scott Kelly via EPA-EFE

A handful of super powerful tropical storms in the last decade and the prospect of more to come has a couple of experts proposing a new category of whopper hurricanes: Category 6.

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Studies have shown that the strongest tropical storms are getting more intense because of climate change.

So the traditional five-category Saffir-Simpson scale, developed more than 50 years ago, may not show the true power of the most muscular storms, two climate scientists suggest in a Monday study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. They propose a sixth category for storms with winds that exceed 309km/h (192mph).

Currently, storms with winds of 252km/h or higher are Category 5. The study’s authors said that open-ended grouping doesn’t warn people enough about the higher dangers from monstrous storms that flirt with 322km/h or higher.

Keaton Beach, Florida after being hit by Hurricane Idalia in 2023. File photo: AP
Keaton Beach, Florida after being hit by Hurricane Idalia in 2023. File photo: AP

Several experts told Associated Press they don’t think another category is necessary. They said it could even give the wrong signal to the public because it’s based on wind speed, while water is by far the deadliest killer in hurricanes.

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