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NOAA downgrades hurricane forecast in wake of slow season
MIAMI — The Atlantic hurricane season will be less active than originally predicted, government forecasters said Thursday after the first two months of the half-year stretch passed without any named storms developing.
Updating its May outlook, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said a warmer weather pattern called an El Nino over the Pacific Ocean was acting as a damper to tropical storms in the Caribbean and neighboring Atlantic.
But forecasters at NOAA's Climate Prediction Center in Washington warned people to remain vigilant because the peak period for hurricanes runs from this month through October. The overall season lasts from June through November.
The updated forecast calls for a below-normal to near-normal season with seven to 11 named tropical storms, down from a range of nine to 14 in the May forecast.
Three to six storms could become hurricanes, down from four to seven in the earlier forecast. The new projection says one or two hurricanes could become major storms, instead of one to three major hurricanes.
Tropical storms get names when sustained wind speeds reach 39 mph. They become hurricanes when sustained winds reach 74 mph. Major hurricanes blow at 111 mph or more. The strongest hurricanes are labeled Category 5, with winds greater than 155 mph.
So far this year, one tropical depression formed off Cape Hatteras, N.C., on May 28, four days before the official start of the season; it quickly fizzled and never threatened land.
Researchers at Colorado State University also have lowered their forecast for the Atlantic season to 10 named storms, including four hurricanes, two of them major.
The El Nino warming of the Pacific sea surface suppresses storm formation, said lead seasonal hurricane forecaster Gerry Bell.
"El Nino produces stronger upper-level westerly winds over the Caribbean Sea and tropical Atlantic Ocean, which help to reduce hurricane activity by blowing away the tops of growing thunderstorm clouds that would normally lead to tropical storms," Bell said.
Competing with El Nino, however, are conditions that mark an ongoing high-activity era that began in 1995, forecasters said. Those factors include enhanced rainfall over West Africa and warmer Atlantic water temperatures, which favor storm development.
"By no means do we expect the season to be dead," Bell said.
Hurricanes have struck the U.S. during previous El Ninos, including Camille in 1969, a Category 5 storm, Betsy in 1965, Bob in 1991 and Lili in 2002.
A calm start doesn't mean the rest of the season will stay quiet, forecasters warned. The first storm of the 1992 season — a below-normal year — did not form until late August. But Hurricane Andrew leveled parts of South Florida when it roared ashore as a Category 5 storm.
The 2004 season also had a slow start. By the time it was over, Florida alone had suffered strikes from four separate hurricanes, one of which also caused 3,000 deaths in Haiti.
"It only takes one storm to put a community at risk," said Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Craig Fugate. "That is why we need to take action and prepare ourselves and our families before the next storm hits, including developing a family disaster plan."
The first storm of this year in the Atlantic, Caribbean or Gulf of Mexico will be named Ana, followed by Bill, Claudette and Danny.
By this time last year, there had been five named storms, including two hurricanes. In all of 2008, there were 16 named storms, including eight hurricanes. About 1,000 people lost their lives, mostly in flash flooding in the Caribbean.
Gas prices spiked last summer when hurricanes Gustav and Ike slammed into the nation's energy complex in the Gulf of Mexico.
In the Pacific, six named storms, including three hurricanes, have developed so far this year. Hurricane Felicia, a Category 4 storm, was expected to weaken Thursday as it moves over colder water far out in the Pacific. Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Enrique maintained its strength with sustained winds near 50 mph about 1,035 miles west of the southern tip of Baja California.
- National Hurricane Center: http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/index.shtml
- NOAA: http://www.noaa.gov
- Hurricane preparedness: http://www.hurricanes.gov/prepare
See archived 'Regional News' stories »
| Must be nice being able to change the rules in the middle of the game, I am sure some bookies would love to move the spread around after the kickoff too. These guys are dum basses and the only thing worse is a weather channel groupie like Joe who gets a semi watching Cantore. |
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| destinista - Aug 09, 2009 11:34:13 PM | Remove Comment |
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| I had been wondering who was coward enough to have been making ridiculous comments under my screename because they aren't smart enough to handle themself in public, now I know, thanks for the clarififcation Watson uyou coward. Joe you can't read either, I posted their prediction, you claimed it was below average, you were wrong, you're not a coward too are you? |
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| swanklin - Aug 09, 2009 08:53:01 AM | Remove Comment |
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| oh, don't waste your time with swanklin there joe. those of us that have been around here long enough know he's the expert on everything, and nobody else knows what they are doing. who else posts a meaningless comment to a meaningless story, but then comes to back to see if it riled up any reply so he can have the excuse to resort to name calling and impolite chatter. then when he crosses a line he comes back in a couple hours and says someone else used his screenname. uh oh swanklin, I hear those phony patriots flying their noisy warbirds right now. I thought you were doing something to take care of that? oh thats right. |
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| watson - Aug 08, 2009 07:11:07 PM | Remove Comment |
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| umm 9 named storms is lower than 11, and 4 hurr is lower than 6. go back to elementary school and learn how numbers work. did you actually read the report and the discussion on el nino? too complicated for your redneck brain I imagine. |
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| joe - Aug 08, 2009 06:44:34 PM | Remove Comment |
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| who was completely wrong? they were. and now you are.
"The May outlook called for nine to 14 named storms, of which four to seven could become hurricanes, including one to three major hurricanes. During an average season, there are 11 named storms with winds of at least 39 mph, of which six become hurricanes with winds of 74 mph or greater and two of those become major hurricanes with winds of 111 mph or higher."
Joe, in case you aren't aware average of 11 and up to 14 predicted makes it an ABOVE average prediction, so now you are as accurate as they are, congrats and sned in for your junior forecaster badge and grant from noaa. |
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| swanklin - Aug 08, 2009 02:40:44 PM | Remove Comment |
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| now THATS the job to have, "scientist" for Al Gore. you get to make stuff up and can never be proven wrong. |
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| cappy - Aug 08, 2009 12:20:21 PM | Remove Comment |
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| Yep, you're right Joe, I remember that. In fact, the only ones that were wrong were the global warming nuts who said it would get exponentially more active every year. |
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| Rose - Aug 08, 2009 11:51:20 AM | Remove Comment |
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| who was completely wrong? months ago they said it would be a below normal season due to el nino. they were actually completely right. |
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| joe - Aug 08, 2009 11:35:18 AM | Remove Comment |
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| what a great job if you can get it. be completely wrong, then keep changing your predictions until you get close, then declare success. |
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| swanklin - Aug 08, 2009 10:52:52 AM | Remove Comment |



