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Typhoon Ragasa is one of the most powerful storms in recent years, with wind speeds exceeding 250 km/h. Striking late in the season, it caught experts off guard and highlighted how altered climate systems are reshaping global weather patterns. Ragasa’s intensity classifies it as a “superstorm”, comparable to the strongest hurricanes observed in the Atlantic.
Climate change warms the oceans, and warm oceans serve as fuel for cyclones. This excess heat contributes to:
In short, human-driven warming creates near-perfect conditions for super typhoons.
Traditionally, storms weakened over land because they lost their oceanic heat source. Today, typhoons such as Ragasa can sustain their strength inland due to vast reserves of ocean heat. Oceans have absorbed much of the excess heat from greenhouse gas emissions, allowing storms to retain destructive energy for longer periods and travel further inland than in previous decades.
Exceeding the 1.5°C warming limit is scientifically significant because it:
This threshold is a critical marker for climate system stability, not just a symbolic number.
Typhoon Ragasa illustrates that climate change is an immediate threat, not a distant possibility. Key lessons include:
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