Record warm ocean temperatures, which in July reached 101.1 degrees Fahrenheit in waters off Florida’s southern tip, contributed to Idalia’s rapid intensification and overall strength. As the AP noted just before the storm made landfall, “Hurricanes get their energy from warm water. Idalia is at an all-you-can-eat buffet.”
CNN reported, “When a hurricane undergoes rapid intensification, its maximum sustained winds increase by at least 35 mph in 24 hours or less – driving up the danger the storm could pose to life and property.” Idalia went from a Category 1 hurricane to a Category 4 in a 24-hour period — as reported by Yale Climate Communications, “Idalia put on a very impressive burst of rapid intensification just before landfall, its winds increasing from 75 mph to 130 mph.”
The record ocean temperatures and their role in Idalia’s rapid intensification were a staple of TV news coverage of the storm both as it approached Florida’s coast and once it made landfall. Several reports on Hurricane Idalia mentioned how the ocean temperatures acted like “jet fuel” for the storm without mentioning climate change.
For example, CNN meteorologist Derek Van Dam reported on August 29 that “it's literally off to the races for Hurricane Idalia. It is now into the open waters of the warm Gulf of Mexico, and we talk about that being jet fuel because water temperatures there are literally 2 to upwards of 4 degrees Fahrenheit above where they should be this time of year. So that is just going to aid in this intensification process.”
The term “rapid intensification” alone was mentioned across national TV news segments on the storm at least 37 times over a 2-day period, with many more iterations of this idea repeated throughout the coverage. But despite the obvious role of warming ocean waters in contributing to Hurricane Idalia, broadcast and cable news coverage only rarely connected its sudden intensity to climate change.
MSNBC made the connection between the storm and climate change in 5 of its 163 segments on Idalia, and CNN linked climate change in just 4 of 347 segments. Fox News mentioned climate change in 1 of its 181 segments. That mention, on the August 30 edition of Special Report with Brett Baier, dismissed comments from President Joe Biden connecting the storm to climate change.
Among the corporate broadcast networks, ABC and CBS each had 1 mention connecting the storm to climate change across their respective 28 segments on Hurricane Idalia. NBC failed to mention climate change at all — though the network aired 33 segments on the storm.
During the August 29 edition of CBS Evening News, anchor Norah O'Donnell illustrated in her headline report of Hurricane Idalia how effortless it should be to connect the storm to our warming planet, noting, “Extremely warm water temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico, largely from climate change and those persistent heat domes this summer, are fueling this hurricane.”