Current:Home > reviews2024 hurricane season forecast includes the highest number of hurricanes ever predicted -LegacyBuild Academy
2024 hurricane season forecast includes the highest number of hurricanes ever predicted
SafeX Pro View
Date:2025-04-09 17:14:59
Buckle up and hunker down: An "extremely active" hurricane season is likely, top forecasters from Colorado State University announced Thursday. In fact, the forecast includes the highest number of hurricanes ever predicted in an April forecast by Colorado State since the team began issuing predictions in 1995.
Colorado State hurricane forecaster Phil Klotzbach, the author of the forecast, knows what the models show him about the hurricane season that starts June 1, but he's a bit incredulous it could really be that busy.
"We're coming out with a very aggressive forecast: 23 named storms, 11 hurricanes and five major hurricanes," said Klotzbach, a senior research scientist in the atmospheric science department at Colorado State University. "And even that is so undercutting all the model guidance."
'Extremely active' season predicted
"Everything is leaning toward an extremely active season: still record warm Atlantic water temperatures and a pretty rapid transition over to La Niña," he said.
A typical year averages about 14 tropical storms, and seven spinning into hurricanes, based on weather records that date from 1991 to 2020.
This forecast covers storms that form in the Atlantic basin, which includes the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico.
Others also predict an active season
Also predicting an active Atlantic season are the UK Met Office and the European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, which calls for nine hurricanes between April and September, he said. Most storm activity typically happens between mid-August and mid-October.
"If Bill Gray knew we were forecasting this, he'd think we'd gone nuts," Klotzbach told USA TODAY last week, referring to his late mentor, who pioneered seasonal hurricane outlooks for the Atlantic.
The seasonal outlook from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration isn't due out until May, but those forecasters are looking at the same worrisome models and temperatures that Klotzbach is seeing.
"Nothing surprises me anymore," said Robbie Berg, a hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center.
Last year, when many forecasts called for a milder season, there were 20 named storms, Berg told USA TODAY. That's six more than normal and the fourth-most named storms on record.
"Our message last year was like 'don't focus on this because we know that there's other factors that come into play in how many storms we get and how strong they get," Berg said. "These signals are that we're heading toward a La Niña, that would tend to support more storms," he said, and the water is "very warm."
Warm water gives hurricanes fuel and contributes to a more unstable atmosphere. La Niña − one phase of a cyclical pattern in water temperatures and winds along the equator in the Pacific Ocean − can affect weather patterns worldwide.
What about landfalls?
The seasonal forecast models have little to do with where hurricanes make landfall. Tropical storms and hurricanes are steered around in part by where high-pressure ridges set up over the ocean.
However, La Nina tends to allow more hurricanes to move more westward across the Atlantic rather than peeling off to the north as they approach the islands in the far eastern Caribbean, Klotzbach said. That favors hurricane landfalls along the East Coast from Florida to Maine, he said, and more toward Florida than Texas and Alabama.
Klotzbach expects to see La Niña conditions appear over the next couple of months. In a typical climate pattern, La Niña leads to more activity in the Atlantic region because the lighter winds in the upper atmosphere allow hurricanes to build up the big powerful cloud tops that give them their oomph, while El Niño drops in winds over the Atlantic that work against those high cloud tops.
How do hurricanes form? An inside look at the birth and power of ferocious storms
But lately, things over the Atlantic Ocean have been anything but typical. Despite the El Niño last year, the Atlantic produced seven hurricanes, the average for a typical season.
Record warmth in the Atlantic Ocean
Ocean temperatures in much of the Atlantic have been setting records for more than a year, and scientists have been unable to fully explain why.
"Obviously there’s still a lot that can change," Klotzbach said, but not that much. Even if the Atlantic warms the least between February and September that it's warmed over the same period any time in the last 40 years, "we'd be at the second-warmest on record going back to 1980."
"It’s going to be hard to get the Atlantic cool at this point," he said, "unless we have a tropical volcano eruption or something like that."
This season could be active, "but that doesn't tell us anything about where those storms may move," Berg said. "So maybe we'd get lucky and have them stay out over the Atlantic. But we don't know that and that's why every year we still have to be prepared because whether it's 10 storms or 20 storms, where they form, where they move is what's critically important."
veryGood! (21921)
Related
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- Kate Spade 24-Hour Flash Deal: Get This $300 Backpack for Just $89
- See How Gwyneth Paltrow Wished Ex Chris Martin a Happy Father’s Day
- When Will Renewables Pass Coal? Sooner Than Anyone Thought
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Prosecutors say man accidentally recorded himself plotting wife's kidnapping
- The Fed has been raising interest rates. Why then are savings interest rates low?
- Warming Trends: Music For Sinking Cities, Pollinators Need Room to Spawn and Equal Footing for ‘Rough Fish’
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- The EPA Is Asking a Virgin Islands Refinery for Information on its Spattering of Neighbors With Oil
Ranking
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- The First Native American Cabinet Secretary Visits the Land of Her Ancestors and Sees Firsthand the Obstacles to Compromise
- Surgeon shot to death in suburban Memphis clinic
- Thom Browne's win against Adidas is also one for independent designers, he says
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Hong Kong bans CBD, a move that forces businesses to shut down or revamp
- Want a balanced federal budget? It'll cost you.
- Craft beer pioneer Anchor Brewing to close after 127 years
Recommendation
Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
Suspect arrested in Cleveland shooting that wounded 9
Biden's offshore wind plan could create thousands of jobs, but challenges remain
Warming Trends: Increasing Heat is Dangerous for Pilgrims, Climate Warnings Painted on Seaweed and Many Plots a Global Forest Make
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Let Your Reflection Show You These 17 Secrets About Mulan
Farmers Insurance pulls out of Florida, affecting 100,000 policies
What tracking one Walmart store's prices for years taught us about the economy