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Hurricane Season 2010: Getting a jump on June 1st

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Xeke

Banned
Oh, and by the way.

There's a chance - right now, just a chance - that a subtropical or tropical storm will form north of Hispaniola late this weekend or early next week.

It would get the first name on the 2010 list: Alex.

Jim Lushine, retired warning coordination meteorologist for the National Weather Service's Miami office, said Thursday in an e-mail he believes it's "likely" the storm will form. He also believes it will move northwest toward the Florida-Georgia state line "but directly will do little but stir up some waves at the beaches."

The first tropical disturbance of the 2010 hurricane season has been designated Invest 90L by the National Hurricane Center. On Friday morning, the system was at 27.5N and 72.3W, or 355 miles east-northeast of Nassau, Bahamas, and 481 miles east of Palm Beach.

Pressure was at 1013 mb and sustained wind speed was estimated at 29 mph. An “Invest” designation means the area is being closely monitored for tropical development - it does not necessarily mean it will become a tropical storm.

National Hurricane Center spokesman Dennis Feltgen was more guarded.

"Some of the models are trying to spin up an area of low pressure. Whether it's tropical, subtropical or no tropical we don't know yet," he said.

"It's not unusual at all, especially in that part of the world," Feltgen said.

"It's not like somebody throws a switch on June 1," Feltgen said. That date, which marks the official start of the season, is just a week and a half away.

Tropical Storm Arthur formed May 31, 2008. The last one before that was Arlene, which formed off Cuba May 6, 1981.

Subtropical Storm Andrea formed off the North Florida coast on May 9, and subtropical storm Ana looped about in the Atlantic 200 miles south of Bermuda for nine days in April 2003. April!

Of 1,354 tropical storms recorded in the Atlantic Ocean between 1851 and 2007, only 18 formed in May, and only four became hurricanes. None struck land. Between 1966 and 2007 only four formed in May and one became a hurricane.

http://www.palmbeachpost.com/weather-news/no-its-not-june-1-but-theres-a-699835.html

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tropsat_600x405.jpg


Hurricane Forecasters See Worst Looming in 2010 Atlantic Season
May 03, 2010, 11:02 PM EDT

By Brian K. Sullivan

May 4 (Bloomberg) -- The 2010 Atlantic hurricane season may rival some of the worst in history as meteorological conditions mirror 2005, the record-breaking year that spawned New Orleans- wrecking Katrina, forecasters say.

The El Nino warming in the Pacific is fading and rain is keeping dust down in Africa, cutting off two phenomena that help retard Atlantic hurricane formation.

Perhaps most significantly, sea temperatures from the Cape Verde Islands to the Caribbean, where the storms usually develop, are above normal and reaching records in some areas.

“We have only seen that in three previous seasons, 2005, 1958 and 1969, and all three of those years had five major hurricanes,” said Jeff Masters, co-founder of Weather Underground Inc. “I am definitely thinking that this is going to be a severe hurricane season.”

With less than a month to go before the official June 1 start of the season, predictions are for 14 to 18 named storms. In an average year, there are 11 named storms with winds of at least 39 mph (62 kph), six of them reaching the 74-mph threshold for hurricanes and two growing into major storms with winds of 111 mph or more, the National Hurricane Center says.

Last year’s nine named storms were the fewest since 1997. Three became hurricanes and none made landfall in the U.S. As the number of hurricanes rises, so do the chances of one striking the oil-rich Gulf of Mexico or Florida’s agricultural areas.

Gulf Threat

The Gulf is home to about 27 percent of U.S. oil and 15 percent of U.S. natural gas production, the U.S. Department of Energy says. It also has seven of the 10 busiest U.S. ports, according to the Army Corps of Engineers. Florida is the second- largest producer of oranges after Brazil.

Energy disruptions could occur if 2010 produces a repeat of 2008, when hurricanes Gustav and Ike slammed into the Gulf Coast about a week apart, said Andy Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates, a Houston-based consulting company.

“The good news going into hurricane season is that we have significant amounts of inventories of gasoline and distillate fuels,” he said.

In 1998, storms caused 15 million barrels of oil outages and 48 billion cubic feet of natural gas outages in the Gulf, according to AccuWeather Inc. records. In 2005, it was 110 million barrels and 683 bcf, and in 2008, 62 million barrels of oil and 408 bcf of gas were shut in.

Storms’ Destruction

The usual misery and destruction from a Gulf hurricane hit may be magnified if the spill of crude from a burned-out rig near Louisiana hasn’t been stopped before storms arrive with winds and waves that could push oil inland.

In 2005, Katrina struck Louisiana, Mississippi and part of Alabama, unleashing floods that devastated New Orleans, killing more than 1,800 people, displacing 250,000 and causing about $125 billion in damage, according to the hurricane center.

Joe Bastardi, chief hurricane forecaster at AccuWeather in State College, Pennsylvania, said he doesn’t think the Atlantic can produce 28 storms this year, as it did in 2005, the most active year on record.

“I have 2005 in the mix” of years to compare to 2010, Bastardi said. “But if I had to choose, I would choose 1998 over 2005.”

In 1998, 14 named storms formed, 11 of which turned into hurricanes, according to Weather Underground’s website. There were 15 hurricanes in 2005.

AccuWeather’s Call

AccuWeather currently calls for 16 to 18 storms to form. Bastardi predicts the current El Nino will change into a La Nina, cooling the Pacific in time to influence the hurricane season, which runs through Nov. 30.

While El Nino fades, hot spots in the Atlantic set a monthly record in March, breaking a mark set in 1969, and tied the high set in June 2005, Masters said. Hurricanes draw on warm water to form and gain strength.

Colorado State University researchers William Gray and Phil Klotzbach chose 1958, 1966, 1969, 1998 and 2005 as the years that shared the most similarities with 2010.

In 1958, 10 storms, including five major hurricanes, formed after an El Nino faded.

In 1969, Hurricane Camille crashed into the U.S. Gulf Coast with winds in excess of 200 miles per hour. The exact strength is unknown because the storm destroyed all the wind measurement devices. It killed 256 people and caused $1.4 billion in damage.

East at Risk

The U.S. coast from North Carolina to Maine has a raised risk of being hit by a hurricane this year, said Todd Crawford, chief meteorologist for Andover, Massachusetts-based WSI Inc.

The Northeast usually has about a 25 percent chance of a hurricane strike, Crawford said. This year, it has a 48 percent chance, close to the 50 percent chance the Gulf of Mexico and Florida have every year, he said.

“We’re not too bullish on the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast,” said Jim Rouiller, a senior energy meteorologist at Planalytics Inc. in Berwyn, Pennsylvania. “We’re liking the track threatening Florida and the eastern Gulf, followed by the entire Gulf and the third emphasis would be on the Carolinas.”

Rouiller said he believes a trough will develop along the U.S. East Coast from the mid-Atlantic states through New England, shielding the region. That may mean more risk for the Canadian Maritime provinces, which have some oil platforms and refineries.

The U.S. Climate Prediction Center will issue its forecast on May 20.

Get Ready

Each year, the Miami-based National Hurricane Center urges everyone living along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts to prepare for a storm strike, Dennis Feltgen, a spokesman, said in an e- mail.

“It’s very important to note that a seasonal outlook cannot forecast where and when storms will form, let alone if or where they will make landfall and at what strength,” Feltgen said. “It only takes one storm hitting your area to make it a bad year, regardless of the number of storms that are forecast in the seasonal outlook.”

An example of how one storm can overshadow an entire season came in 1992. That year, only six named storms and one sub- tropical system formed, and only two of those made landfall, according to hurricane center records.

One of them was Hurricane Andrew, which devastated parts of Florida and Louisiana, killing 26 people and causing $26.5 billion in damage. Its top winds of 165 at landfall in Florida made it a Category 5 storm, the most powerful on the five-step Saffir-Simpson Scale.

It was only the third time such a powerful storm hit the U.S.

http://www.businessweek.com/news/20...ee-worst-looming-in-2010-atlantic-season.html

Researchers Ponder a Hurricane Hitting the Oil-Slicked Gulf of Mexico

By LAUREN MORELLO of ClimateWire
Published: May 17, 2010

The Atlantic Ocean hurricane season begins June 1, and scientists tracking the Gulf of Mexico oil spill are beginning to think about what would happen if a storm hit the growing slick.


The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration won't release its initial hurricane season forecast until Thursday, but experts said it would only take one storm in the Gulf to complicate the ongoing effort to stanch the gushing oil and limit its environmental impact.

NOAA talking points list a number of open questions, such as whether the oil plume could affect storm formation by suppressing evaporation of Gulf water and how a hurricane could change the size and location of the oil slick. There's little information about what would happen if a hurricane hit the spill, experts said.

Still, several scientists are worried that a hurricane could drive oil inland, soiling beaches and wetlands and pushing polluted water up river estuaries.

"My 'oh, no' thought is that a hurricane would pick up that oil and move it, along with salt, up into interior regions of the state that I am convinced the oil will not reach otherwise," said Robert Twilley, an oceanographer at Louisiana State University.

"The bottom line is, how much oil are we going to get into our wetlands? We don't know," he said. "This thing is gushing out in these huge numbers."

That's a question that Florida State University researchers Steven Morey and Dmitry Dukhovskoy are trying to answer with computer models of storm surge and ocean currents.

A somewhat mixed picture

"The storm could potentially transport the oil over some distance, we're not sure how far," said Morey, a physical oceanographer. "It could maybe break up the masses of the oil, through mixing. And it could also cause oil to wash over the land in a storm surge."

He and Dukhovskoy hope to have initial results by the time the storm season begins in roughly two weeks. But first they must tweak their computer models to take oil's physical properties into account.

"Oil on water changes the stress on the water from the winds," Morey said. "Oil will essentially slide over the water and change the roughness of the water. That's why we call it an oil slick. ... The waves present a technical challenge, as well."

But Dukhovskoy said he believes the hardest problem might be predicting the size and location of the slick at the beginning of hurricane season, so the scientists can feed it into their computer models.

While the government hasn't released its initial predictions for this year's hurricane season, other experts expect an active year.

Last month, Colorado State University forecasters Bill Gray and Phil Klotzbach said they "continue to see above-average activity for the 2010 Atlantic hurricane season." The pair are betting that warm ocean temperatures and a weakening El Niño will produce 15 named storms, including eight hurricanes. Half of those, they say, will be major hurricanes -- classified as Category 4 or 5.

An above-average hurricane year

Another hurricane watcher, AccuWeather meteorologist Joe Bastardi, puts that number even higher. He foresees 16 to 18 named storms, and believes this year's hurricane season is in line with those of 1998, 2008 and the record-setting 2005 season, which produced hurricanes Katrina, Rita, Emily and Dennis, among others.

Back in Louisiana, Robert Twilley is thinking about the worst-case scenario and hoping that if Louisiana's wetlands are hit, they'll continue their remarkable recent streak of recovering from natural disasters.

In 2000, a drought in the southeastern United States turned 100,000 acres of Louisiana's wetlands into mud flats, or "brown marsh." In 2005, hurricanes Katrina and Rita carried Gulf water deep into the wetlands. Slow to drain out, the salty water dried out the marshes, Twilley said.

In both cases, scientists saw signs of recovery within a year. But there's no formula for predicting how resilient the Gulf Coast's beaches and wetlands might be in the face of an oil spill-hurricane one-two punch. And any recovery would come in the face of the ongoing wetlands loss from human intervention like canals and other earthworks that prevent silt from replenishing the coastal marshes. Louisiana now loses approximately 15 square miles of wetlands each year.

"These systems will recover," Twilley said. "It's going to be the length of time that's uncertain. And the important thing is, what happens in the meantime? What services do the wetlands provide the state of Louisiana? Fisheries, flood control, nutrient removal, habitat for ducks and nesting birds."

http://www.nytimes.com/cwire/2010/0...s-ponder-a-hurricane-hitting-the-o-86257.html

2010 Hurricane Names

Alex
Bonnie
Colin
Danielle
Earl
Fiona
Gaston
Hermine
Igor
Julia
Karl
Lisa
Matthew
Nicole
Otto
Paula
Richard
Shary
Tomas
Virginie
Walter
 

Relix

he's Virgin Tight™
Damn you beat me to it this season =P. I was waiting for the first system to make it haha. This season could be pretty rough as all "bad" factors are in place for a very bad season. Analog years are 2005 and 1998 so you know what to expect.
 

Xeke

Banned
Relix said:
Damn you beat me to it this season =P. I was waiting for the first system to make it haha. This season could be pretty rough as all "bad" factors are in place for a very bad season. Analog years are 2005 and 1998 so you know what to expect.

2005 being ridiculous. It'll be crazy to see what happens if a storm hits that oil.
 

Dega

Eeny Meenie Penis
Wondering about one hitting the oil too since I live less than 20 miles from the Texas coastline.
 
I was about to say that this was Relix's thread!!! But Relix already beat me here. When a hurricane hits major cat. 3 status, lets let Relix do a seperate thread for that storm :)
 

Relix

he's Virgin Tight™
perfectchaos007 said:
I was about to say that this was Relix's thread!!! But Relix already beat me here. When a hurricane hits major cat. 3 status, lets let Relix do a seperate thread for that storm :)

:lol I'll be sure to keep the thread updated with new info just in case =P
 

Xeke

Banned
two_atl.gif


ZCZC MIATWOAT ALL
TTAA00 KNHC DDHHMM
SPECIAL TROPICAL WEATHER OUTLOOK
NWS TPC/NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL
955 AM EDT MON MAY 24 2010

FOR THE NORTH ATLANTIC...CARIBBEAN SEA AND THE GULF OF MEXICO...

1. SATELLITE IMAGES AND SURFACE OBSERVATIONS INDICATE THAT THE
NON-TROPICAL LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM CENTERED ABOUT 475 MILES SOUTHWEST
OF BERMUDA HAS NOT BECOME BETTER ORGANIZED SINCE YESTERDAY. THIS
SYSTEM IS PRODUCING A LARGE AREA OF DISORGANIZED SHOWERS AND
THUNDERSTORMS OVER THE SOUTHWESTERN ATLANTIC OCEAN ALONG WITH WINDS
TO GALE FORCE. THE LOW IS EXPECTED TO MOVE SLOWLY TOWARD THE
NORTH-NORTHWEST AND IT STILL HAS THE POTENTIAL TO ACQUIRE
SUBTROPICAL CHARACTERISTICS DURING THE NEXT DAY OR SO. THERE IS A
MEDIUM CHANCE...30 PERCENT... OF THIS SYSTEM BECOMING A SUBTROPICAL
CYCLONE DURING THE NEXT 48 HOURS. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION...
PLEASE SEE HIGH SEAS FORECASTS ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER
SERVICE...UNDER AWIPS HEADER NFDHSFAT1 AND WMO HEADER FZNT01 KWBC.
ANOTHER STATEMENT WILL BE ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER
THIS EVENING.

$$
FORECASTER PASCH/ROBERTS
NNNN

http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/gtwo_atl.shtml
 

MechaGodzilla

Neo Member
This thread makes me sad... I hope no one gets a Hurricane this year. I shutter to think what will happen if the Gulf Coast gets one with all that oil in the water. New Orleans native here not so much worried about a big storm (god forbid it) but the oil that would be distributed across the south.
 
so the hurricanes are going to pour the oil over land killing all our crops, while the oceanlife dies from the toxic gases... DOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM
 

Dega

Eeny Meenie Penis
MidnightRider said:
YEah.... I am over in Mississippi.... worried about the exact same thing.


Hehe, I had a dream last night of a Hurricane forming between the Yucatan and Mississippi which then headed towards Texas.
 

pestul

Member
Xeke said:
Could a Hurricane be potentially helpful? Mixing the ocean and diluting the oil?
I think so if it were a defined spill, but this is a constant gusher. Spread it around while gulf is still continuously contaminated. It might slow evaporation and weaken a hurricane too.
 

Xeke

Banned
pestul said:
I think so if it were a defined spill, but this is a constant gusher. Spread it around while gulf is still continuously contaminated. It might slow evaporation and weaken a hurricane too.

Well the most powerful ones don't usually show up till August/September/October, so hopefully it's stopped by then.
 
I'm not ready to be out of power again. After '05 my area was wrecked to no end. Couldn't even get out of my neighborhood for awhile so many tree's were down.

At least I have an iPad in case it goes down.
 

syllogism

Member
The 2010 Atlantic hurricane season outlook is an official product of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Climate Prediction Center (CPC). The outlook is produced in collaboration with scientists from the National Hurricane Center (NHC), and the Hurricane Research Division (HRD). The Atlantic hurricane region includes the North Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, and Gulf of Mexico.

Interpretation of NOAA’s Atlantic seasonal hurricane outlook
This outlook is general guide to the expected overall activity during the upcoming hurricane season. It is not a seasonal hurricane landfall forecast, and it does not predict levels of activity for any particular region.

Preparedness
Hurricane disasters can occur whether the season is active or relatively quiet. It only takes one hurricane (or tropical storm) to cause a disaster. Residents, businesses, and government agencies of coastal and near-coastal regions are urged to prepare for every hurricane season regardless of this, or any other, seasonal outlook. NOAA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the NHC, the Small Business Administration, and the American Red Cross all provide important hurricane preparedness information on their web sites.

NOAA does NOT make seasonal hurricane landfall predictions
NOAA does not make seasonal hurricane landfall predictions. Hurricane landfalls are largely determined by the weather patterns in place as the hurricane approaches, which are only predictable when the storm is within several days of making landfall.

Nature of this Outlook and the “likely” ranges of activity
This outlook is probabilistic, meaning the stated “likely” ranges of activity have a certain likelihood of occurring. The seasonal activity is expected to fall within these ranges in 7 out of 10 seasons with similar climate conditions and uncertainties to those expected this year. They do not represent the total possible ranges of activity seen in past similar years.

This outlook is based on 1) predictions of large-scale climate factors and conditions known to be strong indicators of seasonal Atlantic hurricane activity, and 2) promising new climate models that are now beginning to directly predict seasonal hurricane activity.

Sources of uncertainty in this seasonal outlook

Predicting El Niño and La Niña (also called ENSO) impacts is an ongoing scientific challenge facing climate scientists today. Such forecasts made during the spring generally have limited skill.
Many combinations of named storms and hurricanes can occur for the same general set of climate conditions. For example, one cannot know with certainty whether a given climate signal will be associated with several short-lived storms or fewer longer-lived storms with greater intensity.
Model predictions of sea-surface temperatures, vertical wind shear, moisture, and stability have limited skill this far in advance of the peak months (August-October) of the hurricane season.
Weather patterns that are unpredictable on seasonal time scales can sometimes develop and last for weeks or months, possibly affecting seasonal hurricane activity.
2010 Atlantic Hurricane Season Outlook: Summary

NOAA’s 2010 Atlantic Hurricane Season Outlook calls for an 85% chance of an above normal season. The outlook indicates only a 10% chance of a near-normal season and a 5% chance of a below-normal season. See NOAA definitions of above-, near-, and below-normal seasons. The Atlantic hurricane region includes the North Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean Sea, and the Gulf of Mexico.

This outlook reflects an expected set of conditions that is very conducive to increased Atlantic hurricane activity. This expectation is based on the prediction of three climate factors, all of which are conducive historically to increased tropical cyclone activity. These climate factors are: 1) the tropical multi-decadal signal, which has contributed to the high-activity era in the Atlantic basin that began in 1995, 2) exceptionally warm sea surface temperatures in the tropical Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea (called the Main Development Region), and 3) either ENSO-neutral or La Niña conditions in the tropical Pacific, with La Niña becoming increasingly likely. In addition, dynamical models forecasts of the number and strength of tropical cyclones also predict a very active season.

The conditions expected this year have historically produced some very active Atlantic hurricane seasons. The 2010 hurricane season could see activity comparable to a number of extremely active seasons since 1995. If the 2010 activity reaches the upper end of our predicted ranges, it will be one of the most active seasons on record.

We estimate a 70% probability for each of the following ranges of activity this season:

14-23 Named Storms,
8-14 Hurricanes
3-7 Major Hurricanes
An ACE range of 155%-270% of the median.
The seasonal activity is expected to fall within these ranges in 7 out of 10 seasons with similar climate conditions and uncertainties to those expected this year. They do not represent the total possible ranges of activity seen in past similar years.

Hurricane Landfalls:
It only takes one storm hitting your area to cause a disaster, regardless of the activity predicted in the seasonal outlook. Therefore, residents, businesses, and government agencies of coastal and near-coastal regions are urged to prepare every hurricane season regardless of this, or any other, seasonal outlook.

While NOAA does not make an official seasonal hurricane landfall outlook, the historical probability for multiple U.S. hurricane strikes, and for multiple hurricane strikes in the region around the Caribbean Sea, increases sharply for exceptionally active (i.e. hyperactive) seasons (ACE > 175% of median). However, predicting where and when hurricanes will strike is related to daily weather patterns, which are not predictable weeks or months in advance. Therefore, it is currently not possible to reliably predict the number or intensity of landfalling hurricanes at these extended ranges, or whether a given locality will be impacted by a hurricane this season.

DISCUSSION

1. Expected 2010 activity

Known climate signals and evolving oceanic and atmospheric conditions, combined with dynamical model forecasts, indicate a high likelihood of above normal activity during the 2010 Atlantic hurricane season. This outlook calls for an 85% chance of an above-normal season, only a 10% chance of a near-normal season, and a 5% chance of a below normal season.

An important measure of the total overall seasonal activity is the NOAA Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) index, which accounts for the intensity and duration of named storms and hurricanes during the season. We estimate a 70% chance that the 2010 seasonal ACE range will be 155%-270% of the median. According to NOAA’s hurricane season classifications, an ACE value above 117% of the 1950-2000 median reflects an above-normal season. An ACE value above 175% of the median reflects an exceptionally active (or hyperactive) season.

Consistent with the expected ACE range, the 2010 Atlantic hurricane season is expected (with 70% chance) to produce 14-23 named storms, 8-14 hurricanes, and 3-7 major hurricanes. Therefore, this season could see activity comparable to a number of extremely active seasons since 1995. If the 2010 activity reaches the upper end of our predicted ranges, it will be one of the most active seasons on record.

For the U.S. and the region around the Caribbean Sea, the historical probability of a hurricane strike generally increases with increasing seasonal activity. During exceptionally active seasons, the historical probabilities increase markedly for multiple hurricane strikes in these regions. Nonetheless, predicting the location, number, timing, and strength, of hurricanes landfalls is ultimately related to the daily weather patterns, which are not predictable weeks or months in advance. As a result, it is currently not possible to reliably predict the number or intensity of landfalling hurricanes at these extended ranges, or whether a given locality will be impacted by a hurricane this season. Therefore, NOAA does not make an official seasonal hurricane landfall outlook.

Because of the ongoing oil crisis in the Gulf of Mexico, we are including some historical statistics of tropical cyclone activity for this region (excluding the Bay of Campeche) based on past above normal seasons. These statistics do not represent an explicit forecast for tropical cyclones in the Gulf of Mexico during 2010, as it is impossible to reliably predict such activity so far in advance. Historically, all above normal seasons have produced at least one named storm in the Gulf of Mexico, and 95% of those seasons have at least two named storms in the Gulf. Most of this activity (80%) occurs during August-October. However, 50% of above normal seasons have had at least one named storm in the region during June-July.

2. Science behind the 2010 Outlook

The 2010 Atlantic hurricane season outlook primarily reflects an expected set of conditions during the peak months (August-October) of the season that is very conducive to increased Atlantic hurricane activity. This expectation is based on the prediction of three climate factors, all of which are conducive historically to increased tropical cyclone activity. These climate factors are: 1) the tropical multi-decadal signal, which has contributed to the ongoing high-activity era for Atlantic hurricanes that began in 1995, 2) a continuation of exceptionally warm sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the Main Development Region (MDR, which includes the Caribbean Sea and tropical Atlantic ocean between 9oN-21.5oN; Goldenberg et al. 2001), and 3) either ENSO-neutral or La Niña conditions, with La Niña becoming increasingly likely.

The outlook also takes into account dynamical model predictions from new models such as the NOAA Climate Forecast System (CFS), the European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasting (ECMWF), the United Kingdom Meteorology (UKMET) office model, and the EUROpean Seasonal to Inter-annual Prediction (EUROSIP) ensemble. All of these models are indicating a high likelihood of an extremely active season.

a. Expected continuation of tropical multi-decadal signal

One primary factor guiding this outlook is an expected continuation of the tropical multi-decadal signal, which has contributed to the current high-activity era in the Atlantic basin that began in 1995. This signal is associated with a coherent set of atmospheric conditions, all of which are conducive to increased Atlantic hurricane activity.

During 1995-2009, some key aspects of the tropical multi-decadal signal within the MDR have included warmer than average SSTs, reduced vertical wind shear and weaker easterly trade winds, below-average sea-level pressure, and a configuration of the African easterly jet that is more conducive to hurricane development from tropical waves moving off the African coast. Many of these atmospheric features typically become evident during late April and May, as the atmosphere across the tropical Atlantic and Africa begins to transition into its summertime monsoon state.

Several of these conditions are now present, and they are expected to persist through the hurricane season because we anticipate they are linked in part to the tropical multi-decadal signal. These conditions include 1) weaker (i.e. anomalous westerly) trade winds in the lower atmosphere, anomalous easterly winds in the upper atmosphere, anticyclonic circulation (i.e. streamfunction) anomalies in the upper atmosphere in both hemispheres, and reduced vertical wind shear.

It is impossible to know with certainty whether the multi-decadal signal is indeed continuing during 2010, and current climate models cannot skillfully forecast the multi-decadal variability of the Atlantic climate system. Nonetheless, given that key anomaly patterns now present have also been present for the past 15 years, and have previously been linked to the tropical multi-decadal signal, it is reasonable to expect that they are again linked to this signal. If so, this would reflect a continuation of the active Atlantic phase of the tropical multi-decadal signal that began in 1995.

b. Above average SSTs in the Main Development Region

The second factor guiding the outlook is the expectation of above-average to near-record SSTs in the MDR during August-October. It is very possible that the SST anomalies will be much larger than that typically associated with the multi-decadal signal. Record warm SSTs are now present in the MDR, with departures exceeding +1.5oC nearly everywhere east of the Caribbean Islands. Record warm temperatures were also present during March and April, with area-averaged departures of +1.3oC observed in April. This monthly value is much larger than the previous record departure of +0.95oC seen in 1958. This warmth is much larger than anywhere else in the global tropics, and is further indication that climate conditions are favorable for hurricane development in the Atlantic basin.

A set of factors likely combined to produce the record warmth now in the Atlantic. Based on the observations, the likely cause of the extreme Atlantic warming is a pronounced weakening of the northeasterly trade winds that led to a sharp increase in Atlantic SSTs during February and March. This increase occurred in combination with the typical warming associated with El Niño. It is also superimposed upon the background warming associated with the warm Atlantic phase of the multi-decadal signal that has been in place since 1995, and with longer term trends.

Based on the observations, a key to the development of this record warmth was a sharp increase in SST anomalies during February and March, in response to a significant weakening of the normal northeasterly trade winds and low-level ridge over the eastern tropical Atlantic north of the MDR. These overall anomaly patterns are consistent with El Niño (Knaff 1997, Chelliah and Bell 2004). However, their amplitude is more strongly related to a persistent upper-level jet stream pattern that featured blocking activity at high-latitudes of the North Atlantic and a strong jet stream across the southern North Atlantic. This pattern was associated with a persistent negative North Atlantic Oscillation and positive East Atlantic circulation pattern, which at times was linked to a hemispheric circulation pattern called the negative phase of the Arctic Oscillation.

Two other instances of very warm SSTs have been observed in the MDR during February-April (1958 and 1969). In both years, the SST anomaly subsequently decreased by roughly 50% during the summer months. For 2010, although the record SST departures may well decrease somewhat, we still expect a continuation of above average SSTs throughout the Atlantic hurricane season. This outlook is consistent with the current (and expected) pattern of reduced trade winds across the tropical Atlantic in association with the expected tropical multi-decadal signal. However, it is very possible that the SST departures will be much larger than that associated with the multi-decadal signal. Several climate models are predicting either near-record or record SSTs in the MDR during August-October.

c. ENSO-Neutral or La Niña

Another climate factor known to significantly impact Atlantic hurricane activity is the El Niño/ Southern Oscillation (ENSO). The three phases of ENSO are El Niño, La Niña, and Neutral. El Niño tends to suppress Atlantic hurricane activity, while La Niña tends to enhance it (Gray 1984). These typical impacts can be strongly modulated by conditions associated with a low- or high-activity era. We expect either Neutral or La Niña conditions during the 2010 Atlantic hurricane season, with La Niña now becoming increasingly likely.

The El Niño episode, which contributed to the below normal Atlantic hurricane season last year, has dissipated. Conditions in the equatorial Pacific Ocean are now favorable for the development of La Niña. Also, in the upper atmosphere the pattern of circulation (i.e. streamfunction) anomalies during the last 30 days, and the last 60 days, indicates cyclonic anomalies in the central subtropical Pacific of both hemispheres (blue shading in NH, red shading in SH). This pattern suggests that the atmosphere has already transitioned out of its El Niño state observed last winter and early spring.

All ENSO forecast models currently predict either Neutral or La Niña conditions during the Atlantic hurricane season. During the last few months, the models have been increasingly indicating the development of La Niña during the summer. La Niña contributes to reduced vertical wind shear over the western tropical Atlantic which, when combined with conditions associated with the ongoing high activity era and warm Atlantic SSTs, increases the probability of an exceptionally active Atlantic hurricane season (Bell and Chelliah 2006). NOAA’s high-resolution CFS model indicates the development of La Niña-like circulation and precipitation anomalies during July.

3. Further analysis of the Ongoing High Activity Era in the Atlantic Basin

Atlantic hurricane seasons exhibit extended periods lasting decades of generally above-normal or below-normal activity. These fluctuations in hurricane activity result almost entirely from differences in the number of hurricanes and major hurricanes forming from tropical storms first named in the MDR.

The current high-activity era has been in place since 1995. Hurricane seasons during 1995-2009 have averaged about 14.5 named storms, 8 hurricanes, and 4 major hurricanes, with an average ACE index of 160% of the median. NOAA classifies ten of the fifteen seasons since 1995 as above normal, with seven being hyperactive (ACE > 175% of median). Only five seasons since 1995 have not been above normal, which include four El Niño years (1997, 2002, 2006, and 2009) and the 2007 season.

This high level of activity since 1995 contrasts sharply to the low-activity era of 1971-1994 (Goldenberg et al. 2001), which averaged only 8.5 named storms, 5 hurricanes, and 1.5 major hurricanes, and had an average ACE index of only 75% of the median. One-half of the seasons during this low-activity era were below normal, only three were above normal (1980, 1988, 1989), and none were hyperactive.

Within the MDR, the atmospheric circulation anomalies that contribute to these long-period fluctuations in hurricane activity are strongly linked to the Tropics-wide multi-decadal signal (Bell and Chelliah 2006). A change in the phase of the multi-decadal signal coincides with the transition in 1995 from a low-activity era to the current high-activity era.

Midpoint 18.5 named storms, 11 hurricanes, 5 major hurricanes
 

Relix

he's Virgin Tight™
In all honesty that spread is huge. 14 to 21? Wow. Mid point seems to be just on track at least IMO. 18 storms is a real possibility this season, probably more.

Carefully watching that disturbance in the pacific soon to make way into the carib. Could pose trouble for me in PR
 

Monroeski

Unconfirmed Member
What type of effect might all the oil in the Gulf have on the strength of hurricanes this year? Would it slow them down, speed them up, have no noticeable effect?

Seems like having that much of a different makeup to the contents of the gulf would affect the storms in some way. I know pestul mentioned evaporation above, but I'm wondering if there might be any other potential effects.
 

Ding

Member
I'm wondering if the oil slick will have any effect on the surface temperature of the Gulf. And if so, will that have any effect on hurricane strength.

The slick will probably slow surface evaporation in spots, which should cause the water to retain more heat. On the other hand, I think it's the evaporation over warm water that actually "powers" the storms, so maybe the oil is a good thing. Dunno.

Has the oil measurably darkened the color of the water's surface? If so, that might increase temperatures in another way.

Hopefully, the oily area is too small to make much of a difference.

EDIT: Apparently, Monroeski and I think alike.
 
Relix said:
In all honesty that spread is huge. 14 to 21? Wow. Mid point seems to be just on track at least IMO. 18 storms is a real possibility this season, probably more.

Carefully watching that disturbance in the pacific soon to make way into the carib. Could pose trouble for me in PR

Ive never heard of a storm in the pacific crossing into the atlantic. what is it going to take the panama canal? :lol
 

Dega

Eeny Meenie Penis
perfectchaos007 said:
Ive never heard of a storm in the pacific crossing into the atlantic. what is it going to take the panama canal? :lol

Did you move? I thought I read that sometime back.


I usually look forward to Hurricane season since it usually ends up like a mini vacation lol. I'd do some stupid stuff though whenever I stayed here and a tropical storm would come our way.
 
Emenis said:
Did you move? I thought I read that sometime back.


I usually look forward to Hurricane season since it usually ends up like a mini vacation lol. I'd do some stupid stuff though whenever I stayed here and a tropical storm would come our way.

I was in Austin but I'm back in Lake Jackson with my family over the summer. I'm taking summer classes at UT next summer so this is likely my last summer in Lake Jackson. My last hurricane season in harms way perhaps? Well sounds like this will be a big one.
 

Xeke

Banned
Monroeski said:
What type of effect might all the oil in the Gulf have on the strength of hurricanes this year? Would it slow them down, speed them up, have no noticeable effect?

Seems like having that much of a different makeup to the contents of the gulf would affect the storms in some way. I know pestul mentioned evaporation above, but I'm wondering if there might be any other potential effects.
While ocean temperature is important it's usually the atmosphere that determines the strength of storms and the oil is still pretty small in area compares to a hurricane.
 

Relix

he's Virgin Tight™
Invest 92L should be of interest... very rare to see a system forming from Cape Verde this early in the season and this SOUTH. It's barely 6 or 7N!

at201092_model.gif


Nasty track at the moment to be honest, though there is heavy shear ahead for it. SHIPS predicting a Category 1 Hurricane too. Let's see how it goes.
 
Relix said:
Invest 92L should be of interest... very rare to see a system forming from Cape Verde this early in the season and this SOUTH. It's barely 6 or 7N!

Nasty track at the moment to be honest, though there is heavy shear ahead for it. SHIPS predicting a Category 1 Hurricane too. Let's see how it goes.

hot damn you're right. Rarely does anything form east of the lower antilles in June
 

Relix

he's Virgin Tight™
00zatcfearlyinvest1.gif


Lol fuck me :lol

92L looking damn intense

avn-l.jpg

latest_wv.jpg



If it survives tonight we should have our first TD tomorrow and a possible TS in 48 hours IF it doesn't go too far north and hits a band of shear that's around 15N 50W (which should move out soon).
 
I don't know why the the NHC thinks theres only a 20% chance of this thing organizing. Unless they are thinking the system will hit that sheer or go over some cold waters near south america. Do you have a graph of current water temps in the Atlantic Relix?
 

Relix

he's Virgin Tight™
perfectchaos007 said:
I don't know why the the NHC thinks theres only a 20% chance of this thing organizing. Unless they are thinking the system will hit that sheer or go over some cold waters near south america. Do you have a graph of current water temps in the Atlantic Relix?


2010162at.jpg


That's one of them that is used (doesn't auto-update). Even the blue batches can sustain a storm, and it's in an area that could sustain a Hurricane Cat 2... after it moves out of that batch it still has enough energy to do so. It's a sure fact it will hit some shear but on the latest surface maps there's an anti-cyclone forming over it which will protect from future shear to an extent.

I don't exactly like that image since it underestimates the severity of the situation which is... for fuck's sake, it's JUNE, those waters are late July, early August levels... and we have a Cape Verde storm forming quite far to the east. The waters ARE hot. I don't wanna think if anything gets to the caribbean. Damn

This is the map for June so far:

122nfic.jpg
 

Relix

he's Virgin Tight™
jamesinclair said:
Can we please use print screens and not images that update every 12 hours?

It's faster this way and the post auto updates =P

Anyway, SSTS!

sstjun10.gif


92L looking very good
 

Relix

he's Virgin Tight™
92L went poof after having everything in it's favor. Dry air intrusion and the anti cyclone didn't move with it which killed outflow has crippled 92L. It has a LLC it seems but it will be hard for it now to turn into something. Could always regenerate.
 
Look like it has flared up again and is on a b-line to PUERTO RICO!!!

It probably wont be more than a Tropical Depression when it gets there though.
 

Relix

he's Virgin Tight™
perfectchaos007 said:
Look like it has flared up again and is on a b-line to PUERTO RICO!!!

It probably wont be more than a Tropical Depression when it gets there though.

Yeah it's coming here. It weakened overnight after an impressive satellite showing last night and it seems it's just an open wave now, but will definitely leave some squally weather. Should be fun.
 

Dega

Eeny Meenie Penis
So, just read about 92 and now there is 93. Guess I'll just post the picture...

at201093_model.gif


What do you guys think?
 

Relix

he's Virgin Tight™
93L is looking hot. Already circulation is evident with banding to the north and south. Also seems to be taking aim at the gulf. Heat content is RIDICULOUSLY high in the western caribbean and when this thing gets there it's gonna explode. Wind shear is pretty damn low. In fact it has all the excellent conditions to make our first storm, quite probably hurricane, and who knows if it attains Major status.

Wave around 40W looking hot too, that's gonna hit us over in the antilles.
 
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