Things Going Bump

July 15, 2024

Everyone’s talking about turbulence. Each week now, it seems, we’re reading about this or that flight getting wracked around by unusually rough air. People are being injured, flights are diverting. In one case a passenger died after a Singapore Airlines flight hit severe turbulence over Southeast Asia.

Are dangerous turbulence encounters becoming more prevalent, or are they merely getting more attention?

I honestly don’t know. That’s a bummer of an answer, but I’m unaware of any stats indicating things one way or the other. For now it’s all pretty anecdotal.

That includes my own observations. For instance I seem to notice more and larger thunderstorms these days — over the U.S., over the Atlantic — than I did in years past, but that’s without any objective measuring; it’s just a hunch.

Either way, the media loves a scary-sounding airplane story. In an age when large-scale air disasters have become vanishingly rare, news sources — to say nothing of social media — have taken to hyping minor mishaps instead. That Singapore Airlines incident (the passenger actually died from a heart attack after the turbulence upset) got as much coverage as a crash that killed 200 people would have gotten in decades past.

Another factor is the number of planes in the air. There are more than twice as many commercial flights aloft at any given moment as there were a generation ago. More flights, more people; an uptick in incidents is inevitable.

It’s also possible that yes, turbulence is getting worse. It stands to reason that as climate change intensifies weather patterns and causes bigger, more powerful storms, flying will, to a small but perhaps measurable extent, be bumpier.

How much bumpier is impossible to know, but cases where passengers are hurt or aircraft are damaged will likely remain uncommon. (This is being studied as we speak, though you can expect any results pointing to climate change to set off further squabbling rather than, as it were, clearing the air.)

Also helping are the technological tools now at our disposal. The weather apps that we use in the cockpit are far more advanced than they were even five years ago, and are remarkably accurate when it comes to predicting the where, when, and how bad of turbulence — and how best to avoid it.

Even in worst-case turbulence encounters, meanwhile, the seat belt will probably keep you safe. The vast majority of turbulence-related injuries are suffered by crew members moving through the cabin, or passengers who weren’t belted in when they should’ve been. Flights might get bumpier, but the basics of staying unhurt remain the same.

 

Related Stories:

EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT TURBULENCE.
SAFETY IN PERSPECTIVE

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6 Responses to “Things Going Bump”
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  1. Mitch says:

    Rob – some more info on turbulence
    From Scientific American, April 2023
    “Turbulence is expected to get worse too as the world warms. Scientists at the University of Reading project that the frequency of clear-air turbulence events will double by 2050 and that the intensity of such events will increase by as much as 40 percent.”
    The same source describes a potential turbulence detection method.

    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/early-warning-system-could-reduce-injuries-from-in-flight-turbulence/

  2. Mitch says:

    From NASA: “As carbon dioxide, methane, and other gases increase, they act as a blanket, trapping heat and warming the planet. In response, Earth’s air and ocean temperatures warm. This warming affects the water cycle, shifts weather patterns, and melts land ice — all impacts that can make extreme weather worse.The human-caused rise in greenhouse gases has increased the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events.”
    https://science.nasa.gov/climate-change/extreme-weather/

    Extreme weather events = more frequent and more intense clear-air turbulence.
    From Scientific American, April 2023
    “Turbulence is expected to get worse too as the world warms. Scientists project that the frequency of clear-air turbulence events will double and that the intensity of such events will increase by as much as 40 percent.”
    The same source describes a potential turbulence detection method.
    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/early-warning-system-could-reduce-injuries-from-in-flight-turbulence/
    Injury prevention is posted on the seatback in front of you:
    FASTEN SEAT BELT WHILE SEATED.

  3. Dave says:

    David B for the win.

  4. UAL jetset says:

    you have my vote David B….

  5. David B says:

    I vote: we all skip our desire to respond to Rob, and just enjoy Patrick’s blogging.

  6. Re “It stands to reason that as climate change intensifies weather patterns and causes bigger, more powerful storms,”

    Your reason is wrong. Climate Change is a statistical measure of weather. If you mean CO2 released by mankind into to the atmoshpere, even the United Nations IPCC does not claim that “extra” CO2 will result in bigger and more powerful storms. Just not a fact.