July 1, 2024

Hurricane Beryl's explosive intensification is a grim warning for future storms


Hurricane Beryl rapidly strengthened into a category four storm this weekend with maximum sustained winds of 130 mph. The storm became the earliest category four hurricane ever observed in the Atlantic Ocean, beating the previous record by a full week.

This was far from the first record this relatively young storm broke early in its life.

Beryl was the earliest hurricane we've ever seen so far east in the tropical Atlantic. It was the first major hurricane in this part of the world during the months of June or July. It's going to be the strongest hurricane to hit the Windward Islands this early in the season.


The storm's rate of intensification places it among a very small group of any Atlantic hurricane observed since modern records began in 1851. Meteorologist Sam Lillo crunched the numbers and posted Sunday that the storm's rapid intensification is unheard of this early in the season, matched only by a handful of historical storms that formed at the peak of the season in August and September.

What gives?

Experts have been worried that we're in for a very active hurricane season this year. Seasonal outlooks from NOAA and Colorado State University both called for a tremendous number of storms—so many, in fact, that we may exhaust the list of names for only the third time since the 1950s.

The ingredients behind an active season aren't just about the raw number of storms that form. After all, we had Tropical Storm Chris in the Gulf of Mexico on Sunday. The storm lasted for less than a day as it formed while making landfall on Mexico's east coast.

SOURCE: Tropical Tidbits

While we'll probably have plenty of short-lived and forgettable storms, the ingredients present across the Atlantic are favorable for creating storms like Beryl.

Warmer-than-normal sea surface temperatures are running as hot now as they should at the peak of the season. Combine that with favorable atmospheric conditions expected as La Niña develops and the ingredients are there for explosive development of any healthy tropical disturbance that can take root and take advantage of its environment.

We (hopefully) won't see more record-breaking storms this year. But Beryl makes it clear that the environment is more than capable of supporting very intense storms this hurricane season. This early-season storm is a warning shot to prepare emergency kits and emergency plans now rather than waiting until the peak of the season. It could be a long summer.


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June 3, 2021

It's Hurricane Season. (Again.) Here's What To Expect Heading Into The Summer Months.


Well...here we are. Even though the de facto beginning of the Atlantic hurricane season came on May 15, and we’ve seen our first named storm already, this week is still the official start of the season on paper. Forecasters expect above-average activity in the Atlantic Ocean this year. While we probably won’t come close to matching last year’s all-time record of 30 named storms, even one storm is bad news if it hits land.

The Forecasts

An average Atlantic hurricane season produces 14 named storms, about half of which become hurricanes and a few of those strengthen into major hurricanes. This 30-year average includes both hyperactive years (2005 and 2020) and relatively quiet years (2014 and 2015) alike.

Forecasters (see CSU and NOAA for examples) generally expect an above-average hurricane season this year. These forecasts are based on a variety of trends in long-range models, including water temperatures in the eastern Pacific, water temperatures in the Atlantic, and other factors like overall wind and pressure patterns.

One annoying feature of these long-range forecasts is that they predict a specific number of storms. Ignore the numbers. There’s not much anyone can do to alter their hurricane preparedness based on whether we’re expecting 14 named storms or 17 named storms. Even one storm poses a grave threat to safety and property if it approaches land.

The Niño

El Niño and La Niña get huge billing at the beginning of a hurricane season. There’s lots of talk about it, but little talk about why it’s important.

It seems counterintuitive, but water temperatures in the eastern Pacific matter for storms over in the Atlantic because of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), which produces El Niño and La Niña events. El Niño describes warmer-than-normal waters in the eastern Pacific, while those same waters are colder-than-normal during a La Niña.

These temperature anomalies can affect weather patterns over the region, which in turn influences the potential for tropical development over the Atlantic Ocean. El Niño events often lead to destructive wind shear flowing over the Atlantic that nips developing tropical cyclones in the bud, while La Niña events can suppress wind shear and remove a major obstacle to tropical development in the Atlantic.

The latest projection from the Climate Prediction Center calls for ENSO-neutral conditions to persist through the summer months, with water temperatures right around normal for this time of year and neither El Niño nor La Niña present. The Atlantic tends to see healthy tropical development during ENSO-neutral conditions, so that factors into the forecasts.

The NHC


The National Hurricane Center’s website should be one of your first visits in the morning if you live anywhere near the coast. (Let’s be honest...if you’re reading this, it probably already is. Good on you.)

Hurricanes.gov is responsible for providing information about tropical cyclones in the Atlantic, the eastern Pacific, and the central Pacific basins, which covers everyone from Hawaii to Portugal.

The agency issues daily tropical weather outlooks at 2:00 AM/PM and 8:00 AM/PM Eastern every day between May 15 and November 30. Tropical weather outlooks cover potential tropical development over the next five days, with the option for more additional updates as needed. These should be required reading during the summer and fall months.

Once the NHC initiates advisories (forecasts) on a storm, forecasters will release new advisories at 5:00 AM/PM and 11:00 AM/PM Eastern for the duration of the system. If there are any watches or warnings in effect for land, they’ll issue intermediate advisories in between full advisories, giving us updates on the storm every three hours. (All times are an hour earlier once we set the clocks back in the fall.)

Each full advisory offers plenty of written and graphical information about storms, including:
  • A three-day and five-day forecast map for the storm’s path and intensity
  • Watches and warnings for land near the storm’s path
  • The current extent of tropical storm force/hurricane force winds
  • The estimated and likely arrival times of tropical storm/hurricane force winds
  • Wind speed probabilities for locations along the storm’s predicted path
  • Storm surge forecasts for coastal areas in the United States

The Cone


The single most important product to understand is the cone of uncertainty.

The cone of uncertainty is the historical margin of error in the National Hurricane Center’s forecast track. The center of the storm stays within the cone of uncertainty about 66 percent of the time, which means it tracks outside of the cone the remaining one-third of the time.

It’s so important to understand the cone of uncertainty because it gives us a clue of where the storm could travel based on errors made in past hurricane forecasts. Forecasters calculate the extent of the cone using forecast errors from the previous five years, so 2021’s forecast errors include the 2016-2020 hurricane seasons.

The cone is actually a radius drawn around each of the eight timesteps in the forecast period—12 hours, 24 hours, 36 hours, 48 hours, 60 hours, 72 hours, 96 hours, and 120 hours.

The error is smaller at 12 hours than it is at 48 hours, and the error smaller at 48 hours than it is at 120 hours. This year, the error at 12 hours is 31 miles while the error at 120 hours is 230 miles. All of these circles get smoothed out and joined together so they create one cone that’s narrow at the beginning of the forecast and large at the end of the forecast, visualizing the potential for error in the track forecast.

Even though the cone looks pudgy on some forecasts and super narrow in others, the margin of error always remains the same throughout the season. The shape of the cone depends on the speed and shape of the forecast track. A slower forward speed or a curvy track will result in a shorter and thicker cone because the error circles around each timestep overlap with one another.

Some forecasts are easier to nail than others. Last year’s Hurricane Laura is a great example of a storm that falls on both ends of the spectrum. The storm’s forecast track was tough to pin down early in its existence when it was weak and there were lots of factors pushing and pulling on the storm, but the NHC's forecast came within a few miles of its landfall point in southwestern Louisiana within more than three days before the category four hurricane moved ashore.

The Names


Names are the most important non-issue when it comes to a tropical storm or hurricane. The system of naming hurricanes is occasionally cumbersome or controversial, especially when an unnamed tropical disturbance causes major flooding but it’s still too disorganized to earn a name. 

This year’s list of names was last used in 2015. The World Meteorological Organization retired the names Erika and Joaquin after that season due to the damage caused by those storms, replacing them with Elsa and Julian on this year's list.


Names became a big deal last year because the Atlantic hurricane season produced so many storms that we exhausted the official list of 21 names, requiring the use of the Greek alphabet to name the final nine storms. The resulting confusion and need to retire two of the names (Eta and Iota) forced the WMO to ditch using the Greek alphabet as a fallback.

Beginning this year, in the unlikely event that this or any future season exhausts its list of names, we have supplementary name lists for both the Atlantic and eastern Pacific basins ready to serve as a fallback. These names should cause less confusion going forward and they’re easier to replace if needed.

The Prep

Hurricanes don’t really sneak up on us anymore. If there’s a bad storm heading for land, we usually get a couple of days to prepare before it arrives. That gives folks in harm’s way plenty of time to hit all the checkmarks on the to-do list, like filling up the gas tank and getting ready to leave if told to do so.

You have to wait until the storm is on its way to do the disruptive last-minute prep. There’s plenty you can do now to make things easier if and when the time comes to take action.

Keep a reserve of non-perishable food on hand in case the power goes out. This isn’t just helpful for hurricanes, but it's useful for any summertime storm that could knock out the power. It’s easy to forget how much we rely on electricity for food until the electricity turns off. Stuff like canned foods, Pop Tarts, and fruit cups are easy to store, fine to eat cold, and they have a long shelf life.

Make sure you have batteries and flashlights. The flashlight feature on cell phones is fine in a pinch, but it’s not there to get you through a power outage. That bright light kills your cell phone battery in a hurry. Have a couple of real flashlights (and battery refills) on hand so you don’t have to worry about draining your phone’s juice or burning unsafe candles during a lengthy outage.

Speaking of cell phones, invest in one (or more) cell phone battery charging packs. They’re relatively cheap nowadays and they’re good for a couple of recharges before the charging pack itself has to be recharged.


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May 22, 2021

Ana Forms Near Bermuda; Hurricane Season Starts Before June For Seventh Year In A Row


Subtropical Storm Ana formed north of Bermuda on Saturday morning, kicking off the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season more than a week before the season's "official" start date of June 1—again. This is the seventh Atlantic hurricane season in a row that began early. Ana will remain far out to sea, posing little more than a nuisance to shipping interests and a source for rough seas around Bermuda and parts of the U.S. East Coast.

A low-pressure system meandering in the western Atlantic Ocean took advantage of a brief window where conditions allowed the system to develop into a subtropical storm.

It's a cute li'l storm on satellite imagery today. The storm has a delightfully swirly appearance and even a clear eye-like feature right at the center of circulation. Ana is conspicuously devoid of much thunderstorm activity, which is common for subtropical storms.


Forecasters expect Subtropical Storm Ana to remain far from land and dissipate in a couple of days. The Bermuda Weather Service dropped their tropical storm watch this morning because the storm's winds should stay away from the island.

Rip currents are the only effect this storm will have on land. Some beaches in places like North Carolina are on high alert for these fast-moving currents that can pull swimmers out to sea. A rip current forms between waves that hit the beach head-on, forcing this water to drain away from the beach straight out rather than on an angle. Remember, if you're ever caught in a rip current, don't panic—rip currents pull you out, not under. Swim parallel to the shore until the current releases you, or tread water and calmly signal for help if possible.

Like most early-season systems, Ana didn't originate in the tropics and it's not a fully tropical cyclone. "Cyclone" is the catch-all term for any low-pressure system, regardless of strength or location. A subtropical cyclone is a low-pressure system that has some characteristics of both a tropical cyclone and an extratropical cyclone, or the common type of low-pressure system that brings us most of our active weather.

Subtropical storms aren't purely tropical because air temperatures aren't warm all throughout the system and they don't derive all of their energy from the ocean. Tropical cyclones are powered by thunderstorms around the center of the storm, while subtropical cyclones get at least some of their energy from upper-level winds. Despite their differences, subtropical cyclones are close enough to tropical cyclones in composition and impacts that they warrant full tracking and forecasts from the National Hurricane Center.


This is the seventh hurricane season in a row where we saw the first named storm of the season form before June 1. This trend far surpasses the previous streak of three consecutive early-starting hurricane seasons in 2007, 2008, and 2009. It's a clear and undeniable trend—probably the mixed result of both a changing climate and better detection methods—and it's prompted the experts to ponder moving that climatological start date from June 1 to May 15.

The World Meteorological Organization wrote a recommendation a few months ago asking the National Hurricane Center to consider moving the official start of the season in light of all May storms we've seen in recent years. The NHC met them halfway for now, beginning their regular tropical forecasts on May 15 while continuing to call June 1 the beginning of the season. It's likely that they'll consider officially moving the start date in the years to come.

[Satellite Image: NOAA]


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March 19, 2021

The 2021 Hurricane Season Effectively Starts On May 15 And Ditches The Greek Alphabet


Big changes are coming to the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season. After an active couple of years, meteorologists are (to their great credit) making some quick and necessary changes to make it easier to keep track of future storms, including unofficially moving the start date for the hurricane season and ditching the use of the Greek alphabet as a fallback. Here's a rundown of the changes you can expect to see beginning this season.

Hurricane Season (Effectively) Moves To May 15th


Beginning this year, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) will initiate their twice-daily tropical weather outlooks beginning on May 15. These outlooks normally don't start until the first day of hurricane season on June 1, but we've seen the year's first named storm develop before that date every year since 2015. This change effectively moves the beginning of hurricane season to May 15th without actually adjusting the start date...yet.

Back in February, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), the United Nations' agency tasked with maintaining global meteorology standards, wrote a recommendation that the NHC should consider moving the start of the Atlantic hurricane season from June 1 to May 15—a proposal this humble blog made two years ago. We've seen the Atlantic's first named storm develop before the beginning of the season every year since 2015.

By moving regular tropical weather outlooks from June 1 to May 15, the NHC is effectively moving the start date of the Atlantic hurricane season without officially moving the date up a few weeks. It's a wink and a nod that doesn't make a big splash.

Atlantic hurricane season currently runs from June 1 to November 30. These dates are based on when conditions are most likely to allow tropical cyclones to develop and the fact that almost all storms on record formed between those two dates. Since 2003, we've seen 14 named storms form before the official beginning of the season, with each of the last six hurricane seasons recording a named storm in April or May. (2016 also saw an oddball hurricane in January.) Last year, which was the most active hurricane season on record, saw its first two storms form during the final weeks of May.

Many of these preseason storms formed close to land. Tropical Storm Arthur and Tropical Storm Bertha both brought nasty weather to the Carolinas in May 2020. Topical Storm Alberto made landfall in Florida in May 2018. Tropical Storm Bonnie hit South Carolina in May 2016. Even though these preseason storms were relatively weak, they prompted tropical storm warnings and forced coastal residents to go through the motions a few weeks before the season officially began.

Meteorology is a conservative field. I don't mean politically conservative—it's conservative in its habits. Traditions must be followed. Entrenched meteorologists don't like change. Big changes, when they're allowed, usually move at a glacial pace and lots of professionals bristle at the thought of change at all because we do things the way they've always been done, and that's that.

Resistance to change is deep. Heck, even big changes to a snowfall or hurricane forecast are done in increments. And now, after six straight years of storms forming before the start of hurricane season, there's momentum toward changing our artificial timeline that nature doesn't quite follow. It's admirable that the NHC and WMO are receptive to change and reacted to previous seasons by implementing new practices so quickly.

That's why this next change is even more impressive.

The Greek Alphabet Is Gone


Beginning with the 2021 hurricane season in both the Atlantic and eastern Pacific basins, forecasters will no longer rely on the Greek alphabet to name storms once the official list of names is exhausted. The WMO determined that using Greek letters as a backup was confusing, distracting, and bad practice since some of these surplus storms might need to be retired.

Hurricane names are a big deal. They're not all that important when you consider that the storm's hazards should be the sole focus, but we're human. Humans are obsessed with process stories. Hurricane names are important for tracking and communications, and they're culturally significant for the affected areas. 

Tropical cyclone names in the Atlantic basin come from a predetermined list of 21 names that are in alphabetical order (excluding Q, U, X, Y, and Z) and alternate between masculine and feminine. There are six different lists of names. Each list is used every six years, so 2020's list of names will be used again in 2026, and 2021's list of names was last used in 2015.

Since there are only 21 names for a season, we run into a problem if we see 22 or more named storms in one year. We've only dealt with that twice—for the first time in 2005 and again in 2020. The fallback for exhausting the official list of names was to begin using the Greek alphabet to name the 22nd storm and any storms that formed thereafter.

Names are retired when a storm causes so much death or destruction that it would insensitive and confusing to continue using that name again. Andrew, Dennis, Katrina, and Sandy are all some of the dozens of names that were retired. This is also why we don't use Q, U, X, Y, or Z—there simply aren't enough common names to use as replacements.

But what happens when a storm named after a Greek letter needs to be retired? The official line going into that unprecedented back-half of the 2020 hurricane season is you can't retire a Greek letter and a letter used to name a particularly bad storm would continue being used in the future if needed. We dove nine letters deep into the Greek alphabet in 2020, and the final two storms—Hurricane Eta and Hurricane Iota—slammed into Nicaragua as a category four and a category five, respectively.

Given the destruction those two storms caused, the WMO decided that using Greek letters as a fallback wasn't tenable, so they developed two supplemental lists that'll be used as a backup in case we see another season like 2005 or 2020.

The supplemental lists will only be used if the official list of names is exhausted, and any of the included names can easily be retired and replaced if necessary. We'll probably go many years without ever having to think about these lists again. (Oh, and if this system was in place for the 2020 season, we would've gone up to Isla on the new list.)


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May 20, 2019

Subtropical Storm Forms Near Bermuda, 2019 Hurricane Season Starts in May. (Again.)

Subtropical Storm Andrea formed southwest of Bermuda on Monday. The appearance of a named storm in the Atlantic means this basin's hurricane season has started before June 1 for the seventh time in the last decade. Andrea will be weak and short-lived, posing no threat to land.


This storm forming while everyone is paying attention to the severe weather over the Plains is the atmospheric equivalent of a Friday night news dump. Most people will never know it existed, and the rest will forget about it soon enough. Subtropical Storm Andrea will probably dissipate by early Wednesday morning without affecting land. The storm's remnants could bring showers to Bermuda by the middle of the week, but that's about it as far as impacts are concerned.

A subtropical storm is a low-pressure system that shares both tropical and extratropical characteristics. It's tropical-like. It forms and acts like a tropical cyclone, and carries the same impacts as a tropical cyclone, but it's not fully warm throughout the system and it derives some of its energy from upper-level winds. A fully tropical cyclone would be warm from top to bottom and the thunderstorms near the center of the storm would completely drive its formation and maintenance.



We're almost to the point where you can wager money on a named storm forming before June 1 and wind up winning the bet. This is the seventh hurricane season since 2009, and the fifth season in a row, that we've seen at least one named storm form in the "pre-season."

I argued a few weeks ago that we should move the beginning of the Atlantic hurricane season up a few weeks into May. Not only would moving up the start of the season to, say, May 15, which would sync it up with eastern Pacific's season, but it would start the awareness campaigns a little earlier than they run right now. That'd be helpful for coastal residents, seeing as several of these "pre-season" storms, like Alberto in 2018, wound up making landfall in the United States.

The tropics should fall quiet again for a while after Andrea dissipates.

[Top Image: RAMMB/CIRA]



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May 2, 2019

We Should Move The Start of the Atlantic Hurricane Season to May





There's a low chance that a disturbance over The Bahamas could develop into a tropical system off the southeast coast over the next couple of days. That can seem jarring to read at the beginning of May, but pre-season storms really aren't that uncommon anymore. We should seriously consider moving the start of Atlantic hurricane season up a few weeks from June 1 to compensate for the basin's tendency to pop out the occasional storm in May.

(Update: In 2021, the NHC moved the unofficial start of the Atlantic hurricane season to May 15, with the option to move the official start of the season based on a recommendation from the World Meteorological Organization.)

A trough over The Bahamas has brought soggy weather to the islands over the last couple of days. The disturbance was hard to miss on satellite imagery on Tuesday and Wednesday. Tthe dense overcast and curving cirrus clouds led me to make a bad joke on Twitter that the blob of clouds looked like every forgettable named storm we saw during the sleepy 2013, 2014, and 2015 hurricane seasons. (I had no idea the National Hurricane Center would issue an outlook for the disturbance soon after.)

NHC


Wednesday morning's special forecast from the NHC gave the disturbance a 20 percent chance of developing into a tropical system as it moves west toward Florida and curves back out to sea through the weekend. Models don't really do anything with the system, but it's organized enough—and the environment marginally okay enough (to use a technical term)—that a tiny bit of development can't be completely ruled out.

This isn't all that odd compared to what we've seen in May for much of the last decade.

NHC


Whether it's snowing in September or we're watching a tropical storm in May, use of the phrase "Mother Nature doesn't follow a calendar" is popular among weather folks when it's time to brush off an annoying comment about a weather event happening outside of its prime season. The most annoying thing about that phrase is that it's true, and we really box ourselves into a corner when we say that a certain weather event happens between the dates of X and Y.

It all has to do with climatology. If you chart out all tropical systems in the Atlantic Ocean, you'll see activity start to rise in June and wane in November, hence the traditional June 1—November 30 dates that everyone learns in elementary school. That doesn't mean that tropical cyclones in the Atlantic are confined to that period of the year—however, that's how many people take it. Just like we still fight to shake off the idea that there's a set "tornado season" and you're safe from twisters on Christmas (you're not!), it can feel weird to entertain the idea of any named storms off the coast before June 1.



Six of the last ten hurricane seasons started during the month of May. Tropical Storm Alberto made landfall on the Florida Panhandle last year with 65 MPH winds. The storm continued—as a tropical system, mind you!—all the way to the Ohio Valley before finally petering out. The year before that saw Arlene out in the north-central Atlantic. We had a freak hurricane develop in January 2016 out near the Azores Islands, followed by Tropical Storm Bonnie's flooding rains in the Carolinas and Georgia at the end of May 2016.

That's a hefty list of pre-season storms. There are some factors like better technology and greater knowledge that likely contribute to the increase in pre-season storms in recent years, but the sheer number of May storms leaves the idea of moving the start of the Atlantic hurricane season from June 1 to May 15—coinciding with the eastern Pacific's hurricane season—something that's worth serious consideration.


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June 5, 2018

Here's a Hype-Free Rundown to Help You Keep Track of Storms This Hurricane Season

The long-lasting impacts of last year's Atlantic hurricane season makes the arrival of this year's storm season feel unsettlingly abrupt. The 2018 Atlantic hurricane season officially began on June 1, but it really started with the formation of Subtropical Storm Alberto back on May 25. You may have heard of it referred to as a "season of suspense" on The Weather Channel, which is angering on exactly eight different levels. Here's a hype-free rundown of what you can expect this season and what you need to know to stay informed.

Peak Heating

The traditional dates of hurricane season follows tropical cyclone climatology. The most likely time to see tropical cyclones in the Atlantic Ocean is between June 1 and November 30, but it's not unheard of to see storms form outside of that time frame.

The most likely time to see some sort of tropical activity in the Atlantic—the peak of the season—occurs during the second week of September. This is when the ocean's warmth and favorable atmospheric factors like high moisture, low winds, and regular tropical waves, are usually most abundant.

Storms tend to form closer to the United States and Caribbean early in the season and activity slowly shifts east toward Africa in August and September as tropical waves take hold.

Of course, it doesn't take much to see an impactful storm early or late in the season. Tropical Storm Allison formed in early June 2001 and served as the benchmark for immense tropical flooding until last year's Hurricane Harvey. Hurricane Sandy didn't make landfall until a few days before Halloween.

The cliché goes that it only takes one storm to make a mess of things, and the general lack of storms or long quiet periods doesn't necessarily mean that coastal regions are out of the woods. The Atlantic's first named storm of the 1992 season didn't form until the middle of August. It was Hurricane Andrew.

Class, Rank, and Name

What's in a name? A tropical cyclone refers to any low-pressure system that has tropical characteristics—a warm-core low-pressure system powered by thunderstorms tightly packed around a closed center of circulation at the surface. A tropical depression, tropical storm, and hurricane are all tropical cyclones. Those three names are assigned based on the maximum sustained winds in a storm.

A tropical cyclone with sustained winds of less than 39 MPH is a tropical depression. Winds between 39 and 73 MPH make a tropical storm. Winds greater than 74 MPH are hurricane strength.

These seemingly-random numbers make a little more sense when read in knots instead of MPH—tropical depression starts at 20 knots, a tropical storm starts at 35 knots, and a hurricane is 64 knots or greater, otherwise known as the top of the Beaufort scale, a system of wind measurement that saw widespread use starting in the 1800s. (The deeper you dig into meteorology, the more you find that things are completely arbitrary but there are fun reasons behind the arbitrariness.)

The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale, a real mouthful to type, does a decent job in quickly conveying the severity of a hurricane's winds. Over the years, though, it's turned into a pox on threat communication ahead of a landfalling storm. It's seared into our minds to focus on a phrase like "category three hurricane" rather than "enormous storm surge" or "record flooding from heavy rain." Thankfully, meteorologists and reporters are getting better at talking about hazards like storm surge and freshwater flooding and not putting so much focus solely on wind speeds.

Meteorologists began a system for assigning storms human names to keep track of them and make it easier to talk about the storms in public forecasts and coverage. The six lists of storm names for the Atlantic basin are maintained by the U.N.'s World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and are used on a rotating basis. This year's names are:

2018 Atlantic Tropical Cyclone Names
Alberto Florence Kirk Patty William
Beryl Gordon Leslie Rafael
Chris Helene Michael Sara
Debby Isaac Nadine Tony
Ernesto Joyce Oscar Valerie
The name of a particularly destructive or deadly storm and replaced with a new, lazily-chosen name of the same gender and letter to take its place. The list of names in 2018 was last used in 2012 and features a newcomer, "Sara," filling in for now-retired Sandy. The replacement names are sometimes so similar to the retired name that it makes you wonder why they even bothered; most notably, Katrina was replaced with Katia and Rita replaced with Rina.

In the unlikely event that this hurricane season decides to go on steroids and we exhaust the usable parts of the English alphabet (we skip Q, U, X, Y, and Z for lack of expendable names), protocol states that we switch to the Greek alphabet after the "W" storm. This only happened during the hyperactive 2005 hurricane season, which saw 28 named storms—the 2005 hurricane season ended with the dissipation of Tropical Storm Zeta, named after the sixth Greek letter, on January 6 of the following year.

We've Already Had Alberto


Storms can and do form outside of our scheduled hurricane season. This is the fourth year in a row (!!) that we've seen a named storm form in May. Subtropical Storm Alberto formed in the western Caribbean on May 25 and made landfall on the Florida Panhandle on May 29. The storm managed to survive for several days over land, looking more impressive over Indiana than it ever did over the Gulf of Mexico, before finally losing its structure over the famously-tropical state of Michigan.

A subtropical cyclone is one that has both tropical and extratropical characteristics. A subtropical storm gets some of its energy from upper-level winds, its thunderstorms and wind field are displaced from the center, and it's not fully warm throughout the storm. It's not fully tropical, so it's subtropical. (Clever!) Subtropical and tropical systems are close enough to one another that they deserve the same treatment despite the different structure.

Despite its less-than-threatening title, Alberto left flooding in its wake (especially in western North Carolina) and took several lives through rip currents and a downed tree.

Alberto counts toward the season's total number of storms, so the next named storm will be Beryl.

Seasonal Forecasts

Most forecasts for this season call for average or slightly above-average hurricane activity. We're currently in an ENSO-Neutral pattern in the eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean, meaning that there's neither an El Niño nor a La Niña present. NOAA expects these neutral conditions to persist through most of the hurricane season. El Niño (abnormally warm water) and La Niña (abnormally cool water) can each affect tropical activity in the Atlantic by slowing it down (Niño) or allowing more storms to form (Niña).

Without either of those conditions present, it looks like the water around the equator in the eastern Pacific Ocean shouldn't play much of a role in the Atlantic's tropical activity. So what could?


It'll be interesting to see how much the water here in the Atlantic basin serves to hurt tropical activity later this season. NOAA's current analysis of water temperature anomalies in the tropical Atlantic show waters a degree or two Celsius below normal. This could change as we head deeper into the summer months, but cooler-than-normal water could slow down tropical activity and make intensification harder for storms that do form.

It's important to qualify any discussion of seasonal forecasts with the fact that every situation is unique and relies on so many individual factors that it's hard to tell beforehand what's going to happen. We could have nothing but a string of sloppy, weak storms this year or go the entire year and see two storms that take every opportunity they get to thrive. It's hard to tell in advance.

A Flood of Forecasts

The National Hurricane Center has the sole responsibility of issuing forecasts for storms in the Atlantic Ocean. They issue so many different forecasts and graphics and alerts that it can get confusing even for a weather geek.

I often make my own maps when I write about storms and post about them on social media. My maps are very similar to the National Hurricane Center's. For these examples, though, I'll post the NHC's own graphics.

The NHC issues a tropical weather outlook four times a day explaining their thinking for tropical weather over the next five days. These forecasts are issued in terms of the probability of tropical cyclone formation. A < 30% chance is considered low, 40-60% chance is medium, and >70% is a high chance of tropical development.

An advisory is an update on the storm that includes current conditions (position, wind, pressure) and a five-day forecast. Each advisory includes a public advisory, which is written and formatted in plain English, a forecast advisory containing technical details, a forecaster's discussion outlining the scientific justification for each forecast, and a whole suite of forecast graphics.



The cone of uncertainty is the most common forecast graphic we see from the NHC. The cone of uncertainty is the margin of error in the agency's storm track forecasts. Historically, the center of a storm stays within that cone 66% of the time. Storms can and do venture outside of that cone, especially when it's weak or in a complex environment. The cone only applies to the center of a storm—the rain, wind, and storm surge can extend hundreds of miles away from the storm's center track.


Wind speed probabilities show the chance of seeing tropical storm or hurricane force winds along the track of the storm. It's a good way to get a quick idea of who's at risk of seeing strong winds from a storm. This differs from the cone of uncertainty as it incorporates the anticipated size of the storm's wind field at each point along its forecast track. Even a low probability of strong winds is relatively high.


The most likely time of arrival for tropical storm force winds is a new graphic that helps you plan for when conditions will be too dangerous for travel or storm preparation. The potato-looking graphic shows when strong winds could arrive based on the storm's forecast size, track, and speed. The earliest reasonable time of arrival graphic shows the earliest you could expect strong winds if the storm sped up or grew in size.

Watches and warnings are always tricky. A watch means that dangerous conditions are possible while a warning means that dangerous conditions are expected. A tropical storm or hurricane watch is issued 48 hours before the possible arrival of strong winds. A tropical storm or hurricane warning is issued 36 hours before the expected arrival of strong winds.

Tropical storm and hurricane watches/warnings only apply to wind speeds. These alerts don't speak to the potential for storm surge, flooding, or tornadoes.

A new product that started in 2017 was the addition of storm surge watches and warnings. A storm surge is sea water pushed inland by strong, persistent onshore winds. These new storm surge alerts are issued when a life-threatening storm surge is possible or expected at a particular location.

[Satellite: NOAA | SSTs: NOAA/ESRL/PSD | Storm Graphics: NHC]


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