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[Graphic News] What is a Category 5 storm?

By Nam Kyung-don
Published : Sept. 3, 2019 - 18:23




What is a Category 5 storm?

Hurricane Dorian has slammed into the northern Bahamas, one of the strongest storms to make landfall in history. It’s also the fifth Category 5 storm to form in the Atlantic in the past four years. 

Here are some facts about what makes a Category 5 storm and what to expect as climate change supercharges our weather.


What is a Category 5 storm? 

Scientists rank hurricanes from one to five on what is called the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale. Category 5 storms sustain winds of at least 252 kilometers per hour.

In addition to devastating winds, Category 5 storms unleash catastrophic storm surge -- tsunami-like flooding -- when they make landfall.

Hurricane Dorian’s sustained winds reached 185 miles per hour, tying the top speed at landfall ever recorded in the Atlantic, according to the National Hurricane Center.


Storms big and small 

Hurricane Matthew in 2016 was the first Category 5 storm in the Atlantic since 2007.

Other recent Category 5 storm’s include Hurricane Irma, which battered the Caribbean and the southern United States in September 2017.

Hurricane Katrina, which killed over 1,800 people across the US Gulf Coast in 2005, was also a Category 5.

In contrast, Hurricane Florence in 2018 weakened to a Category 1 event before touching down in the Carolinas, though it was still extremely dangerous.


Violent times

In 2018, a string of catastrophic storms -- including Florence and Hurricane Michael, in September and October -- killed dozens of people and caused a total of $32 billion in damage in North Carolina, South Carolina and Florida.

Michael was the strongest storm to hit the continental United States since 1969.

In May, the NOAA forecasting service predicted a “near-normal” Atlantic hurricane season for 2019. But authorities encouraged Americans to prepare, as more than 80 million people live in high-risk areas, even if they aren’t actually on the coast.


Worse to come? 

Scientists have long predicted that global warming will make tropical storms more destructive, and some say the evidence for this may already be visible.

Warmer oceans add to the raw fuel on which hurricanes feed, and higher sea levels boost storm surges that may overcome coastal defenses. (AFP)


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