Climate change won’t stop East Coast’s worst storms, study finds

Climate change may melt away smaller snow storms but it won’t be able to hold back more powerful East Coast systems.

John Bachman, a letter carrier for the U.S. Postal Service (USPS), walks between high snow banks after delivering mail to a house in Hull, Massachusetts,  on Saturday, Feb. 21, 2015. (Photographer: Scott Eisen/Bloomberg)

Climate change may melt away smaller snow storms but it won’t be able to hold back more powerful East Coast systems.

Minor storms that drop mere inches of powder will become rare by the end of 21st century, according to a new study published in the Geophysical Research Letters by Colin Zarzycki, a meteorology professor at Pennsylvania State University.

Crippling storms not mitigated by warming climate

“The big nor’easters are not just going to go away,” Zarzycki said in a statement from the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado. “The really crippling storms that have major regional impacts on transportation, on the economy, on infrastructure are not significantly mitigated in a warming climate.”

Using computer models, Zarzycki determined less powerful storms would dwindle because of a shorter snow season and warmer temperatures which means more rain will fall. At the same time, the warmer ocean and atmosphere “can turbocharge storms when conditions are lined up” so the much larger systems that strike a few times per century won’t be stopped.

Paralyzed cities predicted

The same regions currently menaced by nor’easters will remain unchanged. As the population swells in some of the most densely packed areas of the East Coast, chances are that one or more of the most economically important U.S. cities could be paralyzed, the statement said.

A series of nor’easters roared up the East Coast in 2018, dropping snow by the foot and raising tides to record levels in Boston and along the Massachusetts coast.

Related: New York’s nor’easters join list of 2018 $1 billion disasters

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