From NBC:
“NOAA issues highest-ever
early forecast for the coming hurricane season”
In the highest hurricane season
forecast they have ever released in May, National Oceanographic and Atmospheric
Administration forecasters said Thursday that the coming months may be
exceptionally busy. “The forecast for named storms, hurricanes and major
hurricanes is the highest NOAA has ever issued for the May outlook,” Rick
Spinrad, the agency's administrator, said in a news conference. “This season is
looking to be an extraordinary one in a number of ways.”
NOAA predicts eight to 13
hurricanes and 17 to 25 named storms. Storms get names when their wind speeds
reach 39 mph or higher. Given the near-record warmth in much of the Atlantic
Ocean and a strong chance of La Niña conditions, forecasters said there is an
85% chance of an above-normal season along the Atlantic seaboard. "All the
ingredients are definitely in place to have an active season," said Ken
Graham, the director of the National Weather Service.
Hurricane season begins June 1
and ends Nov. 30. It typically starts to peak in late summer and early fall.
Global warming increases
hurricanes' propensity for damaging effects. A warmer atmosphere makes the
storms more likely to rapidly pick up wind speed as they near the shore. And
when storms make landfall, climate change is increasing the probability they will
stall and drop rain at extreme rates. NOAA is far from alone in making such a
prediction for this hurricane season. Nearly every public, private and
government hurricane forecast service is expecting a high season for hurricanes
and named storms, according to a website operated by Colorado State University
and the Barcelona Supercomputing Center, which tracks predictions each year.
The site has aggregated early hurricane forecasts from 23 centers.
The NOAA forecast is in line with
the aggregate. On average, the services have predicted 23 named storms, 11
hurricanes and five major hurricanes (the designation given to storms that
reach Category 3 or higher, based on their wind speeds). “When it comes to the
number of storms, that would be the third most on record,” said Philip
Klotzbach, a meteorologist at Colorado State University who specializes in
Atlantic basin seasonal hurricane forecasts. In 2020, there were 30 named
storms, the most in observed history. Twelve of the storms made landfall in the
U.S., and every mile of the mainland Atlantic coast was placed under hurricane
warnings or watches at some point during that season, according to Yale Climate
Connections. Last year, 20 named storms formed in the Atlantic, including seven
hurricanes. It’s unusual to see record sea surface temperatures coincide with a
strong chance of La Niña — a natural climate pattern associated with Atlantic
hurricane. The combination strengthens forecasters' confidence that this season
could be significant. “Last year was an interesting season. It was this clash
of the Titans. The Atlantic was stupid hot like it is now, but it had a strong
El Niño, which would knock down your big storms,” Klotzbach said. But this
year, “the Atlantic is still super hot and El Niño is gone, so everything is
pulling the same direction,” he added. Brian McNoldy, a senior research
associate at the University of Miami, said it’s hard to find years in the past
with similar conditions. “We’ve never had a La Niña with ocean temperatures
this warm in the Atlantic before. There’s not a historical year to look back
to,” he said. “We’re certainly in uncharted territory. As someone who lives on
a fairly hurricane-prone part of the coastline, I’m not too excited about it.”
Worldwide, sea surface
temperatures have remained record hot for more than a year. McNoldy said
Caribbean temperatures are warmer in May than they are at peak in a typical
year. In the tropical east Atlantic, temperatures today are similar to what's
normal for August. Record sea surface temperatures could fuel rapid
intensification, a phenomenon in which hurricane winds ramp up suddenly as the
storm nears shore. Climate change makes that process more likely. A study last
year found that tropical cyclones in the Atlantic Ocean were about 29% more
likely to undergo rapid intensification from 2001 to 2020, compared to 1971 to
1990. Hurricane Idalia, which strengthened from Category 1 to Category 4 in
just 24 hours, is a good example. The trend makes hurricane preparations more
challenging — officials have less time to warn communities, deploy emergency
resources and help people evacuate. The high forecast doesn’t necessarily mean
that a strong hurricane will make landfall in the U.S., however. “We have no
idea where the storms are going to go, but in general when you throw a heck of
a lot of darts at the board — one of them starts to stick,” Klotzbach said.
^ Hopefully they are wrong. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/noaa-issues-highest-ever-may-145553366.html
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