In the Atlantic, hurricanes are sort of an American side of the pond kinda thing. Sure, they can form closer to Africa and Europe but most of the time, that is where the connection—and the damage—ends. But not this time. Not with Hurricane Ophelia.
In a year already brimming with several unbelievable storms, Hurricane Ophelia blustered its way onto the list of rare events in mid-October 2017. It wasn’t the strongest storm of the year: it never made it to Category 5 strength. Instead, Ophelia set records for how strong it got where it was located in the Atlantic and its odd track, which took it on a collision course with Ireland.
From the beginning, Ophelia was an odd-ball. It formed and strengthened well off in the eastern Atlantic Ocean where storms rarely do so and became a hurricane on October 11 over ocean waters that were, from a hurricane’s perspective, only moderately warm, albeit warmer-than-normal. It also marked the tenth consecutive named storm—Franklin to Ophelia—to reach hurricane status in the Atlantic, tying an Atlantic basin record.
Interacting with weather systems across the mid-latitudes that helped steer the storm, Ophelia then began to move to the northeast. The ocean temperatures were nowhere near as warm as those farther south across the Caribbean, but they were abnormally warm for the eastern Atlantic. Meanwhile, the air temperatures aloft were colder than normal. Ophelia was able to exploit the temperature contrast to drive its strengthening thunderstorms.
On October 14, Ophelia became a major hurricane with 115 mph winds. It was the farthest east that a storm had reached that intensity on record. And Ophelia’s track had Ireland in its crosshairs.
Hurricane in Ireland?
Almost! As Ophelia barreled towards Ireland, it began to lose its tropical characteristics and morph into an extremely strong storm system more associated with the mid-latitudes. In fact, just 12 hours before slamming into Ireland on October 16, Ophelia was still a hurricane!
Don’t let the name change fool you, though. Ireland bore the brunt of a strong post-tropical storm Ophelia. Wind gusts were measured at 119 mph on Fastnet Island in Ireland—if verified, the fastest ever recorded in Ireland. On the mainland, winds reached 78 mph in Cork. The storm killed at least three people, with the strong winds causing widespread damage, knocking out power to over 300,000. Coastal areas in western Ireland also flooded as ex-hurricane Ophelia’s winds pushed water onshore.
Woah, this must be rare!
It depends on how you define rare. While events like this, where a previous tropical system ends up impacting Ireland and the British Isles, do not occur every year, they do occur several times a decade. For instance, in 2011 former Hurricane Katia caused over $150 million dollars in damages to England. In the western North Atlantic, record-breaking snow in eastern Greenland from the remnants of Hurricane Nicole in October 2016 appears to have contributed to a small increase in the mass of the Greenland Ice Sheet this past year. But even if it wasn't alone in the historical record, Ophelia was one of the strongest cases observed.
Climate change?
Hurricane Ophelia only managed to reach the strength it did due to the warmer than average waters in the eastern Atlantic Ocean. As waters warm in the future due to human-caused climate change, it’s thought that hurricanes will be able to maintain their strength farther north. In fact, research published in 2014 already found a poleward shift of 53 and 62 miles in the latitude at which tropical cyclones hit their peak strength in the northern and southern hemisphere, respectively, during the past thirty years (Kossin et al 2014).
But as we’ve written previously, the trends only show up when the data for all the ocean basins in each hemisphere are pooled together.
The poleward shift in latitude of maximum intensity is a zonal average trend, which means it emerged when Kossin and his colleagues collapsed worldwide cyclone-basin data into discrete latitude bands. The pattern is strong in some basins (including the Pacific), but weaker or absent in others (including the North Atlantic). The differences are likely a result of short-term climate variability and different geography from basin to basin.
Regardless of any global warming connection, in a year where so many hurricanes will forever be etched in the minds of millions across the Caribbean and United States—Harvey, Irma, Maria—Ophelia will not be quickly forgotten across Ireland.