Orlando Sentinel

Tropical Storm Beta forms as season takes Greek turn

- By Joe Mario Pedersen and Richard Tribou

The last name in the “2020 hurricane season name list” has been used as Tropical Storm Wilfred officially formed Friday morning in the east Atlantic as the earliest “W” named storm on record at the National Hurricane Center. Soon after, the NHC ventured somewhere it has only had to go once before — the Greek alphabet — as Subtropica­l Storm Alpha formed off the coast of Portugal, and the doubled down with Tropical Storm Beta in the Gulf of Mexico forming Friday evening.

The three named storms in 24 hours set a new record.

Meanwhile,. the NHC continued to monitor Category 3 Hurricane Teddy as well as two more systems.

Wilfred is the final named storm of 2020 hurricane season’s alphabetic name list, forcing hurricane specialist­s to begin using letters from the Greek Alphabet for future storms - something that has only happened once before in 2005. There was a total of 29 named storms that year and required the NHC to go six letters deep into the Greek alphabet.

The previous earliest named “W” storm was also from that year in the form of Wilma, which cut through Florida as a Category 3 hurricane bringing devastatin­g damages to South Florida and was responsibl­e for 42 counties losing power, according to a NOAA report. It later developed into a Category 5 storm in the Gulf of Mexico.

As of 5 p.m., Wilfred was located 735 miles westsouthw­est of the Cabo Verde Islands with maximum sustained winds of 40 mph heading west-northwest at 18 mph with tropical-storm-force winds extending outward up to 140 miles from its center. Wilfred is forecast to slightly strengthen before encounteri­ng wind shear, which should devolve it into a tropical depression by early next week.

After Wilfred, the NHC put out a special advisory for Subtropica­l Storm Alpha that formed near the coast of Portugal at noon EDT with 50 mph winds, and by 5 p.m. had made landfall with winds down to 45 mph located about 120 miles northnorth­east of Lisbon, and moving northeast at 17 mph.

Tropical-storm-force winds extend out 35 miles from its center and it’s expected to move across northern Portugal and Spain before dissipatin­g on Saturday.

The previous Alpha formed in Oct. 22, 2005, making the 2020 storm the earliest formed Alpha on record.

Five hours later, Tropical Depression 22 became Tropical Storm Beta in the Gulf of Mexico.

As of 5 p.m., TS Beta was located 335 miles eastnorthe­ast of Tampico, Mexico and 280 miles east-southeast of the mouth of the Rio Grade with sustained winds of 40 mph moving northnorth­east at 9 mph.

“A slow westward motion is forecast to begin late Saturday or Saturday night, and this motion will likely continue into early next week,” forecaster­s said. “On the forecast track, the center of Beta will approach western coast of the Gulf of Mexico Sunday night and Monday.”

The NHC projects Beta to grow near hurricane strength on Sunday. It currently has tropica-stormforce winds extending out 105 miles. Increasing swells will affect the Texas and Mexico Gulf Cost over the weekend.

The NHC will continue any new named storms using the Greek alphabet. Next on the list would be Tropical Storm Gamma, then Delta, Epsilon and Zeta, the farthest the NHC has ever gone in its use of Greek letters in 2005.

NOAA released a forecast in August predicting the season to have somewhere between 19 to 25 named storms, but there’s a good chance the Atlantic could see a total above the forecast, said Dennis Feltgen, spokesman and meteorolog­ist at the NHC.

“Earlier this season we were asked if we would start using Greek letters for storms, and I told them it wasn’t a matter of ‘if’ but “when” and “how deep into the Greek alphabet we go,” Feltgen said.

In the mid-Atlantic, Hurricane Teddy dropped from Category 4 to Category 3 by the NHC’s 5 p.m. update, now with sustained winds of 125 mph.

Still the second major hurricane of the year, Teddy is located 770 miles southeast of Bermuda, which endured a direct hit from Hurricane Paulette last week.

The storm is moving northwest at 14 mph and could impact the northeast

United States or Canada in the middle of next week, but on late Sunday or Monday will approach Bermuda, which is now under a Tropical Storm Watch.

Its hurricane-force winds extend 60 miles from Teddy’s center and its tropicalst­orm-force winds extend outward up to 230 miles.

“Large swells generated by Teddy are affecting the Lesser Antilles, the northeaste­rn coast of South America, the Greater Antilles, and the Bahamas, and will spread to Bermuda and the east coast of the United States by Saturday,” the NHC said. “These swells are likely to cause life-threatenin­g surf and rip current conditions.”

The rest of the tropics has two more systems of varying developmen­tal odds scattered through the eastern Atlantic.

First, Post-tropical cyclone Paulette is located a few hundred miles northwest of the Azores and forecast to move quickly south, where it could redevelop tropical characteri­stics late this weekend or early next week as it moves over warmer waters. It has a 30% chance of developmen­t in the next two days, and a 40% chance of developing in the next five.

Second, a tropical wave is forecast to move off the west coast of Africa by early Saturday. It has a 20% chance of developmen­t in the next five days.

The hurricane season officially runs from June 1-Nov. 30, but 2020 saw two storms form before June 1, and still has more than 10 weeks to go.

 ?? NOAA/GOES EAST ?? The Atlantic basin was busy with Hurricane Teddy, Tropical Storm Wilfred, Subtropica­l Storm Alpha, Tropical Storm Beta and two more systems at 5 p.m. Friday.
NOAA/GOES EAST The Atlantic basin was busy with Hurricane Teddy, Tropical Storm Wilfred, Subtropica­l Storm Alpha, Tropical Storm Beta and two more systems at 5 p.m. Friday.

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