Arab Times

NOAA trims hurricane season outlook ‘a bit’

-

LOS ANGELES, Aug 7, (AP): This hurricane season may be a tad quieter than forecaster­s initially thought, but it is still likely to be busier than normal, government forecaster­s and others say.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion on trimmed their hurricane season outlook from a 65% chance for above normal activity to 60% and increased the odds of a normal season from 25% to 30% because of uneven sea surface temperatur­e, including a patch of cooler water off Portugal. Parts of the Atlantic are warmer than normal, but the variabilit­y had forecaster­s “backing off on the higher end” of their prediction­s, said lead hurricane outlook forecaster Matthew Rosencrans.

The weather agency now predicts 14 to 20 named storms instead of its May forecast which was 14 to 21. The predicted number of hurricanes remains the same at six to 10 while those storms that hit major category of at least 111 mph are now forecast to be three to five instead of three to six. The forecast includes the three tropical storms that formed in June and early July, about average for this time of year, but quieter than the last few years.

An average season has 14 named storms with seven becoming hurricanes and three of those being majors, according to NOAA. There were 21 named storms last year, a record 30 in 2020 and 18 in 2019.

“While the tropics have been relatively quiet over the last month, remember that it only takes one landfallin­g storm to devastate a community. This is especially critical as we head into what the team here anticipate­s is likely to be a busy peak of the season,” Rosencrans said in a press briefing.

Weak

A persistent La Nina — the natural cooling of parts of the Pacific that changes weather worldwide — weak trade winds and some warmer than normal Atlantic water temperatur­es still point to a busy season, Rosencrans said. But the patches of cool water, with temperatur­es closer to normal than originally predicted in some places, “could kind of tamp down on activity,” he said.

Colorado State University, which pioneered hurricane season forecasts, also dialed back its prediction­s for the season compared to what it said in April. The school now predicts 18 named storms, down from 19, with eight becoming hurricanes, down from nine. Colorado State predicts four major hurricanes, same as it forecast in April.

“I don’t think the season is going to be a dud, but it’s taking its sweet time getting going,” said Colorado State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach, head of the school’s forecast team.

Klotzbach said this year with its strong La Nina and nearer to average water temperatur­es seems similar to 1999, 2000, 2011 and last year, which featured a devastatin­g Hurricane Ida that hit Louisiana and sloshed into the Northeast with heavy rain, causing many deaths in the New York-New Jersey region.

“Hopefully, we’ll have no Idas this year, but the overall environmen­t is very similar,” Klotzbach said.

About 90% of Atlantic storms happen from August on. Hurricane season peaks from mid-August to mid-October with the season ending on Nov 30.

Also:

LISBON, Portugal: Portugal recorded its hottest July on record last month, the country’s weather service said Friday.

The heat worsened Portugal’s drought, with 45% of the mainland in “extreme drought” — the highest classifica­tion — and the rest in “severe” drought, which is the second-highest, by the end of July.

Many other parts of western Europe also witnessed torrid conditions in the early summer, and scientists say climate change will continue to make weather more extreme.

Southern Europe’s climate is changing to resemble that of North Africa, according to experts.

The Portuguese weather service, known by its acronym IPMA, said July was the hottest since national records began in 1931.

NEW ORLEANS: Drought made the Mississipp­i River sluggish and led to a smaller than average dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico — an area where there’s too little oxygen to support marine life, the scientist who’s been measuring it for decades said.

Each year, investigat­ors cruise the region to measure the zone. This year, they found it covers 3,275 square miles (8,500 square kilometers), said lead researcher Nancy Rabalais, of the Louisiana Marine Universiti­es Consortium, and Steve Thur of the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

That’s just under 70% of the average-sized area predicted in early June.

 ?? ?? Klotzbach
Klotzbach

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait