Another Grim Pre-Season Hurricane Forecast for the Atlantic

The Intersection
By Chris Mooney
Mar 7, 2007 2:08 AMNov 5, 2019 10:15 AM

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Especially since El Nino went away (PDF), hurricane watchers have been worrying about what kind of season we'll see in the Atlantic later this year. El Nino has a well known tendency to suppress Atlantic storms, contributing to quieter years like 2006 (click image). But now, we're expected to see El Nino-neutral or even La Nina conditions (the opposite of El Nino) over the coming months. The latest forecast from Tropical Storm Risk (PDF), a group based in the UK, only heightens the sense that we may have a bad year ahead. TSR has now raised its forecast for an active season:

Based on current and projected climate signals, Atlantic basin and US landfalling tropical cyclone activity are forecast to be about 75% above the 1950-2006 norm in 2007. This is the highest March forecast for activity in any year since the TSR replicated real-time forecasts started in 1984. There is a high (~86%) likelihood that activity will be in the top one-third of years historically.

By the numbers, TSR is predicting 16.7 named storms, 9.4 hurricanes, and 4.3 intense hurricanes (Category 3 or higher). A rival group, that of William Gray and Phil Klotzbach of Colorado State University, had also predicted an active year back in December, but the CSU forecast--14 named storms, 7 hurricanes, and 3 intense hurricanes--did not go as far as TSR now has. The next forecast from Gray/Klotzbach will be on April 3; the next one from TSR will be on April 5. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has not yet released a hurricane outlook for 2007; I believe the first NOAA forecast will come sometime in May. A cautionary note: It's important to view these forecasts with a grain of salt--they get more and more accurate as the season nears, and especially once it's underway. Also, none of these three statistically based forecasts was very accurate during the pre-season last year due to the failure to detect El Nino. Still, the picture they're painting is worrisome...

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