Tropical weather is not often on our minds at this time of the year, since the Atlantic Hurricane season is still months away. But there are other active tropical basins at this time – last week Cyclone Idai spawned in the Southwest Indian Ocean and brought devastation to vast swathes of Mozambique, Zimbabwe, and Malawi. With 700 deaths already attributed to it, Cyclone Idai is one of the deadliest tropical cyclones to have impacted southern Africa on record. Sadly, that death toll could continue to increase as floodwaters recede, revealing the full extent of damage from the storm. In this post, I’ll take a look at why Cyclone Idai was able to grow so powerful, and why it caused such serious flooding.
Meteorological Synopsis
Idai formed as a tropical depression in the Mozambique Channel on March 4, 2019. It moved onshore shortly thereafter and spent several days over Mozambique as it executed a cyclonic loop. During this time, it managed to retain tropical characteristics (keeping a warm core), before it exited again over the open waters of the Mozambique Channel. As it continued moving east, it encountered increasingly favorable conditions for intensification with very warm sea surface temperatures and decreasing vertical wind shear.
For more details on the images above see the Wikipedia article about Idai.
A subtropical ridge began forming and strengthening over eastern South Africa, causing the cyclone to start turning west and heading towards the coast of Mozambique again.
As Idai moved west, it underwent 2 distinct periods of rapid intensification in response to the favorable conditions found over the Mozambique Channel during this time. In between, it experienced an eyewall replacement cycle, where it temporarily weakened as concentric eyewalls formed, and the inner one eventually collapsed as the outer one took over.
Unfortunately for those in Idai’s path, it regained strength after a second eyewall replacement cycle as it approached landfall because conditions continued to be quite favorable. The analyses above with satellite overlays valid for 18:00 UTC March 14, 2019 show the cyclone near its peak intensity under nearly ideal conditions (lower left of the image). The first two analyses show strong upper level divergence and low level convergence around Idai respectively. This indicates that upper level outflow was well established, which is also visible from the symmetrical presentation of the cyclone visually, with outflow channels evident. Upper level outflow is required for “ventilating” intensifying cyclones and helping them grow/maintain their intensity. That’s because as the storm gathers strength, low level convergence intensifies as winds in the storm pull air from surrounding areas inwards towards the eye of the storm. This convergence is what powers the intense thunderstorms in the eyewall. Without upper level divergence, the air converging at the storm’s core would continue building up, eventually resulting in rising pressure and a weakening storm – pressure, after all, is a measure of the mass of air over a given area.
The last image shows that Idai was also in a zone of very low vertical wind shear, between 5-10 knots during this time before landfall. Low vertical wind shear helps preserve the structure of a tropical cyclone. Unlike with severe thunderstorms, wind shear can actually shift the core of the strongest thunderstorms away from the center of a tropical cyclone’s center of circulation. That often marks the beginning of the end for a tropical cyclone. In the case of Idai, low wind shear let it strengthen considerably close to landfall, although it did weaken a bit right before landfall due to increased shear and interaction with land.
Why Such Devastating Flooding from Idai
While powerful storm surges accompanied Idai, the worst impact from Cyclone Idai was widespread catastrophic flooding in Mozambique and in Zimbabwe. Part of this comes down to the geography of the area impacted, with a broad, flat flood plain between Pungwe and Buzi Rivers, and with parts of Beira, the largest city in the area, lying below sea level.
As Dr. Jeff Masters pointed out in a post on Weather Underground, another big reason why Idai caused such serious flooding was because of the storm’s slow forward progress. This came down to the storm being embedded in an environment with weak steering currents.
In the animated loop of 250-850 mb deep layer mean steering winds, we see that as Cyclone Idai traversed the Mozambique Channel, it was in an area of very light steering winds (very few streamlines, few arrows on those streamlines). Mature tropical cyclone motion is influenced by winds in this layer of the atmosphere because these winds impact the tall thunderstorms in the cyclone’s core. When steering currents break down as in the loop above (a ridge with anticyclonic flow dissipated north of Idai), a tropical cyclone will start to slow down and sometimes can meander. In this case, with Cyclone Idai, a slower moving storm led to a prolonged period of heavy rain over the impacted areas. Had steering currents remained stronger, Idai would have produced less heavy rain over the same areas during a shorter window, likely reducing flooding impacts considerably.
Consider Donating to Support Recovery Efforts
The affected countries of Mozambique, Malawi, and ZImbabwe simply do not have the financial and physical resources to respond to a disaster of this magnitude. There are many worthwhile NGOs on scene providing relief aid. Please consider making a contribution to support these efforts, as the recovery effort will take years to complete. International Rescue Committee, Doctors Without Borders