Hurricanes: How to Prepare and Why They鈥檙e Getting More Dangerous

As the state prepares for Hurricane Dorian to bring heavy winds and significant rains to the coast and eastern North Carolina, Duke faculty members are explaining what they're looking out for this season, and what steps you should take to be prepared.
Starting Off: Hurricane Season Is Different Now
At the recent 鈥淐oming Storm鈥 conference, Stanback Dean Toddi Steelman of the Nichoas School had a message: Global warming is creating stronger storms, and we鈥檙e not prepared for them.
鈥淲e need to get better at anticipatory planning -- anticipating what鈥檚 to come,鈥 Steelman said. 鈥淥ur data all look backwards for the most part. We plan based on historical trends, not on what the future has in store for us. So how many years in a row have we witnessed an event that happens in a 100-year flood plain? What we really need to be thinking about are 500-year floodplains and 1,000-year floodplains.鈥
There鈥檚 also a little recognized factor in the damage done by hurricanes: Low-income people suffer more serious consequences.
鈥淒isasters are equal in that they do affect everyone but they also discriminate. We know that those who are most vulnerable 鈥 the poor, the disenfranchised, the disabled and the elderly 鈥 suffer the greatest in these events," Steelman said. "And they continue to suffer long after those of us with more resources have been able to recover.鈥
Read more from The Coming Storm conference.
What We Might Expect
We are still a few days away from Dorian bringing heavy winds to North Carolina, but Pratt professor Ana Barros says conditions are ripe for strong storm surges across the coast.
鈥淢any things may change as demonstrated by the potential track area, the High Sea Surface Temperature increases the risk of storm surge and strong winds,鈥 said Barros, an expert on hydrometeorology, climate predictability, extreme events and risk assessment of natural hazards.
鈥淧resently, the forecast places Dorian along the North Carolina Coast on Thursday/Friday, likely on Friday. No matter what happens, persistent heavy rainfall and consequently flooding should be expected over the Coastal Plain."
鈥淎gain, it is (a few) days out from affecting the North Carolina coast, and while we have simulated hurricanes in my group, we do not have yet the capabilities to localize forecasts with such long-lead times, though we are working on developing such capabilities using Big Data methodologies.鈥
Read about using
The Toxins Also Rise
Professor Lee Fergusonne is one of the lead scientists investigating the Cape Fear GenX contamination issue and the subsequent program to search for other potential pollutants. He is watching for the effects of flooding and the dangers lurking for contamination from sources such as chemical plants, hog farms and sewer treatment systems.
Ferguson, a faculty member in the Pratt School鈥檚 Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, recently spoke about how flooding and storm surges in eastern North Carolina following Hurricane Florence likely contributed to a rise of toxins in drinking water. One was Gen X, a family of chemicals produced in a industrial factory on the Cape Fear River. These are very long-lasting chemicals, Ferguson noted. 鈥淚 like to say they鈥檒l still be around when the sun goes supernova.鈥
鈥淚t's probably not the greatest thing to be putting in our drinking water,鈥 Ferguson said. 鈥淲hen we looked in our samples, especially from the Cape Fear River during the flooding, you see this spike in bars right there at the site that is directly downstream of the Chemours plant. Now this sampling was done long after Chemours stopped discharging their industrial waste into the river. So why are these compounds showing up in the river during the flooding from Hurricane Florence? It turns out that the groundwater around the site is extensively contaminated with these chemicals. 鈥 And when you have flooding and inundation 鈥 it can wash out those compounds into the rivers.鈥
Predicting Hurricanes and Those Baffling Spaghetti Models
We're getting better at predicting hurricane paths, but there's a lot more to learn. In a Pratt School podcast, Andrew Bragg, an assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering, explains the latest models.
We鈥檙e all now used to watching maps that run different potential paths running through the ocean like lines of spaghetti. It鈥檚 frustrating to scientists and the public alike that there is so much variation between the projected paths. The difference between a glancing blow and a direct hit is significant.
Bragg said hurricanes are so complex that meteorologists can never make perfect, precise predictions, but knowing how to read these ensemble of data we can make meaningful predictions. And with each hurricane, we learn something that can make the modeling of the next one better, Bragg said.
鈥淵ou run the model many times using the different initial conditions, and that creates an ensemble of predictions. These predictions allow you to say, 鈥業 don't know exactly where the hurricane is going to make landfall, but I can say statistically, within a certain amount of probability, where it's going to land and what category it's going to be when it makes landfall.鈥欌
Listen to the
When the Levees Break
In some cases, the worst damage comes after the storm moves through. The Pratt School鈥檚 Nathaniel Chaney says machine learning and satellite information are helping scientists make better flooding predictions.
But Chaney adds that with increased urbanization of high-risk areas, as well as the heavy-clay soil content of the region, maker for the perfect 鈥渋ngredients for the persistent flood risks.鈥
鈥淗ere in North Carolina, especially in the Piedmont, our soils are mostly clay, and water infiltrates at a much slower rate through clay than through sand. Basically, the soil doesn鈥檛 soak up water as well,鈥 Chaney said. 鈥淭he water runs into streams, the streams overflow their banks and rush into the floodplains, thus enhancing the flood risk.鈥
Listen to the
The Dangers of Generators
Duke's Dr. John Jacob Freiberger, an associate professor of anesthesiology, discusses the dangers that can occur when generators are used improperly. Freiberger also explains how to safely use a generator after a power outage.