Houston Chronicle

2020 HURRICANE SEASON IS ‘NOT NORMAL’ (OF COURSE)

A record 30 named storms plowed through Atlantic

- By Andrea Leinfelder STAFF WRITER

The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season had a record 30 named storms, and 12 of those hit the U.S. coastline.

Hurricane season ends Nov. 30 (that’s next week — fingers crossed there isn’t a Thanksgivi­ng surprise), but the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion released its end- of-season roundup on Tuesday.

“The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season ramped up quickly and broke records across the board,” Neil Jacobs, acting NOAA administra­tor, said in a news release.

There were a record nine named storms from May through July. Then 10 named storms formed in September; the most for any month on record. There was one point when five of these September storms were being monitored at the same time.

And on Sept. 18, Tropical Storm Wilfred exhausted the pre-selected 21names for this-Atlantic hurricane season. For only the second time in history, the Greek alphabet was required to name subsequent storms.

“Everything just layered in the direction of enhancing and reinforcin­g each other,” said Matthew Rosencrans, a meteorolog­ist at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center, “to give those stronger storms and to give more storms.”

There were several layered conditions that supported the developmen­t of tropical storms or hurricanes. One is a warm phase of sea surface temperatur­e in the North-Atlantic Ocean. The sea’s surface temperatur­e has cool and warm phases that may last 20to 40 years, a natural occurrence that has been happening for at least 1,000 years. This current-warm phase, which began in 1995, has favored more, stronger and longer-lasting storms.

Adding to this was a stronger west African monsoon. Disturbanc­es that become tropical storms often come from Africa, and a stronger monsoon (with southwest winds fromthe Atlantic Ocean blowing into western Africa and more moisture being pulled in that direction) means these disturbanc­es are better

positioned to become tropical storms or hurricanes, Rosencrans said.

There was also weaker vertical wind shear and La Niña, both providing conditions more favorable for storms to develop whereas their opposites (strong vertical wind shear and El Niño) could have impeded storm developmen­t.

An average Atlantic hurricane season has12 named storms, six hurricanes, and three major hurricanes (a Category 3 or above). This year had 30 named storms, 13 hurricanes and six major hurricanes.

This is the most storms on record, surpassing the 28 from 2005, and the second-highest number of hurricanes on record, according to the news release. The 12 storms that reached the continenta­l U.S. broke a previous record of nine U.S. landfalls in 1916.

For storms that reached the U.S., Hurricane Laura was the strongest at landfall. It came ashore near Cameron, La., on Aug. 27 as a Category 4 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 150 mph.

Nicaragua was also hit with two Category 4 storms: Hurricane Eta made landfall on Nov. 3 with maximum sustained winds of 140 mph and Hurricane Iota made landfall on Nov. 16 with maximum sustained winds near 155 mph.

Hurricane Iota was the strongest storm at landfall during the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season.

“It is not normal to have such a strong storm so late in the season,” Rosencrans said.

Warmer ocean and air temperatur­es, rising sea levels and other effects of climate change are expected to fuel stronger hurricanes. The flooding from storm surge could be higher, rainfall could be heavier and winds could be stronger. The percent of storms that reach Category 4 or Category 5, with sustained winds of at least 130mph, is expected to increase.

Rosencrans said there will be studies to see if climate change contribute­d to this especially active hurricane season, which was the fifth consecutiv­e year with an above-normal Atlantic hurricane season. But those studies haven’t been completed yet, and he reemphasiz­ed the layering of multiple factors that fueled this hurricane season.

And as of noon Tuesday, the National Hurricane Center was tracking one disturbanc­e in the Atlantic Ocean. Thankfully, it only had a 10 percent chance of developing into a tropical or subtropica­l cyclone within the next 48 hours.

But, it is 2020.

 ?? Godofredo A. Vásquez / Staff photograph­er ?? Linda Drounette, 78, drinks a cup of coffee while looking out at the debris left after Hurricane Laura blew through Lake Charles, La., on Aug. 27. For storms that reached the U.S., Laura was the strongest at landfall.
Godofredo A. Vásquez / Staff photograph­er Linda Drounette, 78, drinks a cup of coffee while looking out at the debris left after Hurricane Laura blew through Lake Charles, La., on Aug. 27. For storms that reached the U.S., Laura was the strongest at landfall.
 ?? Steve Gonzales / Staff photograph­er ?? Edgar Yanez battles the wind and rain off the 61st Street Pier as Tropical Storm Beta approaches Galveston on Sept. 20.
Steve Gonzales / Staff photograph­er Edgar Yanez battles the wind and rain off the 61st Street Pier as Tropical Storm Beta approaches Galveston on Sept. 20.
 ?? Jon Shapley / Staff file photo ?? Mark Allums, left, and Hunter Clark watch waves crash ashore as outer bands from Hurricane Laura begin to hit the coast on Aug. 26 in High Island. The two are from Bogata, and they came to board up windows at a beach house in High Island.
Jon Shapley / Staff file photo Mark Allums, left, and Hunter Clark watch waves crash ashore as outer bands from Hurricane Laura begin to hit the coast on Aug. 26 in High Island. The two are from Bogata, and they came to board up windows at a beach house in High Island.
 ?? Elizabeth Conley / Staff photograph­er ?? There were a record nine named storms from May through July. Then 10 named storms formed in September, the most for any month on record.
Elizabeth Conley / Staff photograph­er There were a record nine named storms from May through July. Then 10 named storms formed in September, the most for any month on record.

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