USA TODAY US Edition

Forecast for hurricane season already is causing concern

Experts see good chance for a La Niña pattern

- Dinah Voyles Pulver

With three months to go until Atlantic hurricane season starts, the chances for a La Niña by summer are increasing, and that’s an anxiety-inducing forecast for those still recovering from hurricanes along the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic seaboard in recent years.

“We’ve got possibly extremely warm sea surface temperatur­es, especially in the main (hurricane) developmen­t region and the prospect of La Niña being in place,” said Florida State climatolog­ist David Zierden. “That’s not good news for hurricane season.”

La Niña, a pattern of cooler waters along the equator in the Pacific Ocean, often leads to more active hurricane seasons. It tends to reduce vertical wind shear over the Atlantic and allow budding tropical storms to build the high cloud structures that can supercharg­e their energy.

Meanwhile, sea surface temperatur­es in the tropical Atlantic are already running above normal, even warmer than last year. Ocean surface temperatur­es globally set another new record high, reaching 21.13 degrees Celsius last Wednesday, or just over 70 degrees Fahrenheit, according to the most recent data available through the University of Maine’s Climate Reanalyzer. That’s a slight increase above the 21.1 degree-record set last April and again last August.

What’s the forecast for La Niña?

The signs are showing a shift from the strong El Niño that has been in place in the Pacific over the past year, said Jason Dunion, a meteorolog­ist at the University of Miami and the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s Hurricane Research Division.

The bright bands of dark orange on sea surface temperatur­e maps that show El Niño’s warmer-than-normal waters along the equator are fading.

The entire El Niño/La Niña cycle is known as the El Niño Southern Oscillatio­n, and its three phases can affect weather around the world. Whether the oscillatio­n shifts to neutral this summer or to a La Niña is unknown.

The latest forecast puts the chances for a La Niña arriving by the heart of hurricane season at 75% or greater, Zierden said. As a result, he expects the seasonal forecasts from Colorado State University and NOAA to call for a very active season.

But the oscillatio­n is far from the only key ingredient in cooking up hurricanes. Warm waters are essential.

Warm water is hurricane fuel

Warm water “can provide more fuel for storms, potentiall­y leading to a higher number of storms and possibly greater intensity,” said Hui Li, a project scientist at the University Corporate for Atmospheri­c Research.

Seasonal forecaster­s are very closely monitoring the Eastern Atlantic, where sea surface temperatur­es in the region off the African coast are 1, 2 and even 3 degrees Celsius warmer than normal right now, Dunion said. “And it’s not even spring yet.”

More than half the tropical systems each year come from that “hurricane nursery,” and 80% to 85% of the major hurricanes, Dunion said. So it’s “a really important place.”

With warm temperatur­es to the east and less wind shear to the west, Dunion said, storms could get a boost from both sides as they advance across the Atlantic Ocean.

Other factors that can influence hurricane season don’t develop until later in the summer, Zierden said, such as rainfall and dust storms off western Africa.

It’s “still early for making seasonal outlooks, and numerous uncertaint­ies exist,” Li said. “The timing of the La Niña transition will likely play a crucial role.”

It takes the right ingredient­s for tropical systems to form, including warm sea surface temperatur­es, a moist environmen­t and low wind shear, Zierden said. “To get a Category 4 or 5 hurricane, it takes perfect conditions, and those don’t always line up.”

Besides that, he said, knowing the projected number of hurricanes doesn’t tell anyone which regions are mostly to be affected by a hurricane.

What happened during the 2023 hurricane season?

The season wound up ranking fourth for the most named tropical storms since 1950, the National Hurricane Center said. The overall number of hurricanes and major hurricanes was about average, with seven hurricanes and three major hurricanes.

Only one hurricane – Idalia – made landfall on the U.S. mainland last year. It left a trail of devastatio­n across North Florida after a rare landfall just south of the state’s Big Bend region.

La Niña, a pattern of cooler waters along the equator in the Pacific Ocean, often leads to more active hurricane seasons. It tends to reduce vertical wind shear over the Atlantic and allow budding tropical storms to build the high cloud structures that can supercharg­e their energy.

Typically, the strongest influence of El Niño tends to be in the western Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico, where the winds increase that shear off the high cloud structures of hurricanes, Dunion said. But last year, sea surface temperatur­es in the eastern Atlantic were much warmer than normal.

Could the season have had even more hurricanes without El Niño? Did the warm sea surface temperatur­es muscle out El Niño?

A number of scientists are interested in the competing factors, Dunion said. “There are still a lot of studies going on, and a lot of speculatio­n.”

What to remember about hurricane season

Things like El Niño and La Niña are useful in the big picture, said Alan Sealls, a retired television meteorolog­ist and adjunct professor at the University of South Alabama. “But the problem is we all live in the little picture, and they just don’t tell us what could happen or where it would happen exactly where we live.”

Despite the rising odds, it’s worth rememberin­g that everything actually comes down to what the atmosphere will be doing during any given week of hurricane season, Sealls said. Even if the odds continue to increase, he said, it won’t give “any advance notice for where things get crazy, if they get crazy.”

The threat of an active hurricane season doesn’t prompt Louisiana officials to preach an “extra layer” of preparedne­ss, said Mike Steele, director of communicat­ions for the Governor’s Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedne­ss. Louisiana residents suffered four hurricanes that made landfall from August 2020 to August 2021, including three major hurricanes.

The state wants its citizens to remain prepared year round, Steele said. “You can’t hang your hat on hope, you hang your hat on being prepared.”

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