When Hurricane Georges was barreling toward
Louisiana's coastline in 1998, no one knew how
accurate the storm surges predicted by
meteorologists would be, LSU professor Gregory
Stone said.
Not a comforting thought for the 70 percent of
the state's residents who live in coastal zones --
most of which are at or below sea level.
But Stone is trying to change all that, hoping
to significantly improve the predictive power of
computer models through measurement of storm surge
and other oceanographic phenomena in the Gulf of
Mexico.
This hurricane season, with the help of funding
from several state and federal agencies, including
a recent million-dollar grant from the Federal
Emergency Management Agency, Louisiana will be
better prepared than ever to monitor hurricane
activity in the Gulf.
Just two years ago, most of Louisiana's
coastline was devoid of any type of accurate
ocean-monitoring system, Stone said. Of the 20
federally funded weather buoys located in the
Gulf, only one was near Louisiana's coast, leaving
a vast gap in ocean-monitoring instrumentation.
And the buoys that did exist did not provide
any information on storm surge. So when
meteorologists predicted the potential storm surge
accompanying a hurricane, they were forced to do
so without the key offshore information that could
make the predictions more accurate.
Stone said storm specialists constantly
confront problems associated with lack of
measurement data. In addition, flood maps used to
identify areas of likely inundation by storm
surges are not always correct, he said.
"In 1995, when Hurricane Opal hit Florida, the
storm-surge estimates were seriously
under-predicted," Stone said. "The experts
predicted a surge that was 5 feet less than what
actually hit the coast. That difference can mean
the inundation of hundreds of square miles, which
can impact thousands of people."
Stone, who teaches in LSU's Department of
Oceanography and Coastal Sciences, has been
working to fill the gaps in the Gulf with
stationary ocean-observing platforms that measure
a wide range of oceanographic and meteorologic
conditions, including storm surge and various wave
parameters.
The program, called WAVCIS --
Wave/Current/Surge Information System -- is the
most advanced program of its kind in the U.S., he
said.
"We're trying to take the guess work out of
potentially dangerous offshore situations," Stone
said.
In the past two years, Stone and his team from
LSU's Coastal Studies Institute have received
funding for four new platforms, one of which just
went online last month. The stations, which were
designed and built by Stone and his team, include
instruments attached to oil platforms above and
below water and on the floor of the Gulf.
The information gathered at these offshore
sites is transmitted to computers at LSU's Coastal
Studies Institute via a satellite-based cellular
telephone network. There, it is examined for
quality-control purposes and distributed worldwide
via the Internet. The data are also archived at
LSU for ongoing research.
Added to the data collected from the existing
buoys, the information from the new stations will
help scientists and emergency-preparedness
personnel more accurately predict storm surges and
plan voluntary or mandatory evacuations.
"We now have more offshore information
pertaining to waves and currents than we've ever
had before," Stone said. "For the coming hurricane
season we will be in a better position than ever
to assess the early effects of hurricanes as they
come into the Gulf. We have crossed a new
threshold."
"Until now, no one has measured storm surge
during large offshore events to the degree that we
will. By measuring surge, predictions will be much
more accurate," Stone said. "We will soon have
instrumentation several hundred miles out into the
Gulf. If we start detecting storm surge that far
out, we can get a better read on the magnitude of
surge closer to shore. The earlier we can get that
information to the state's emergency-preparedness
personnel, the greater the opportunity to reduce
risk to life and property."
Stone said that, along with earlier warnings,
the new stations will provide information on which
areas of the coast would be impacted most by storm
surge, winds and waves. Such information could
help people prepare and, in turn, could save
insurance companies millions of dollars in claims.
He also said the stations will provide for
improved understanding of oceanographic conditions
during all types of weather.
"We have already learned quite a bit about
air-sea interaction this winter with having three
stations online around the clock," Stone said. "I
am very excited about having detailed information
on offshore wave dynamics during big events such
as Hurricane Andrew -- a storm that whet our
appetites in 1992 for better measurements
offshore."
Stone said there is a major effort in the U.S.
to create an integrated ocean-observing system.
Since LSU has partnered with several other
institutions, including the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, Texas A&M University and various
research arms of the U.S. Navy, the university is
poised to play a leading role in that effort,
Stone said.
He also said the infrastructure he is
developing offshore will give LSU an advantage
over other institutions in obtaining research
funding at the national level.
Other grants that have helped Stone fund the
WAVCIS project came from the state's Oil Spill
Research and Development Program, the Louisiana
Board of Regents and the Louisiana Department of
Natural Resources. Stone also has grant proposals
pending with the National Science Foundation and
the U.S. Office of Naval Research. - By Kristine
Calongne
Related website:
WAVCIS
program
18-Apr-2000