Los Angeles Times

It’s hurricane season. First up will be Arlene

- By Freida Frisaro Frisaro writes for the Associated Press.

MIAMI — It’s time for residents along the southeaste­rn U.S. coastlines to make sure their storm plans are in place as the 2023 Atlantic hurricane season gets underway.

Forecaster­s are predicting a “near-normal” season, but Mike Brennan, the new director at the National Hurricane Center in Miami, stressed during a news conference this week that there’s really nothing normal when it comes to hurricanes.

“A normal season might sound good in comparison to some of the hurricane seasons in the past few years,” he said. “But there’s nothing good about a near-normal hurricane season in terms of activity.”

Will the 2023 season be busy?

Uncertaint­y is the key word, Brennan said.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion predicted in late May a 40% chance of 2023 being a near-normal hurricane season; a 30% chance of an above-average season, which has more storms than usual; and a 30% chance of a below-normal season, which has fewer.

“So we’re expecting a busy season with 12 to 17 named storms,” Brennan said, adding that five to nine of those storms could become hurricanes, with one to four growing into major hurricanes.

“It only takes one storm affecting your area to make it a busy season for you,” he said.

What’s new this season?

This year, the hurricane center is rolling out a new storm surge model that Brennan said “helps push real-time storm surge prediction out to 72 hours in advance of the storm” in hopes of getting lifesaving informatio­n to emergency managers regarding evacuation orders.

In addition, tropical weather outlooks have been extended from five days out to seven days, providing “an additional heads-up” for residents to make decisions about whether to evacuate in advance of a storm, Brennan said.

What effect will El Niño have?

El Niño is a natural temporary warming of the Pacific Ocean that occurs every few years, changing weather patterns worldwide.

Generally, the Atlantic is quieter and has fewer storms during El Niño years. That’s because the warmer waters of El Niño make warmer air over the Pacific reach higher into the atmosphere and affect wind shear that could head off storms.

Brennan noted there are other factors that add to the uncertaint­y of the effects of El Niño, such as very warm sea surface temperatur­es, weaker low-level easterly flows and a more active African monsoon season.

“So these forces are going to kind of fight it out over the course of this hurricane season,” Brennan said. “We don’t know how this season’s going to play out.”

What is FEMA’s role?

Federal Emergency Management Agency Director Deanne Criswell said her agency is working to protect residents in hurricane zones by getting them the “critical informatio­n that they need” and making it easier for people to apply for help.

She noted that summer isn’t just hurricane season, it’s also wildfire season.

“So we are in the summer season of severe weather events, but I think, as many of you know, it’s not just a summer season of severe weather anymore,” she said, noting weather-related events take place throughout the year.

Why do hurricanes have names?

Hurricanes are named primarily to eliminate confusion if there are two or more storm systems occurring at the same time.

The United States began using female names for storms in 1953 and began alternatin­g male and female names in 1978.

There is a rotating list of Atlantic hurricane season names every six years.

The list can then be repeated, with names being eliminated as they are retired from the rotation, according to the National Hurricane Center’s website.

The 2023 hurricane names are: Arlene, Bret, Cindy, Don, Emily, Franklin, Gert, Harold, Idalia, Jose, Katia, Lee, Margot, Nigel, Ophelia, Philippe, Rina, Sean, Tammy, Vince and

Whitney.

Hurricane names are routinely retired if a storm was so deadly or caused so much destructio­n that using the name again would be inappropri­ate. It’s not up to the National Hurricane Center to retire a name, however. That practice is left to an internatio­nal committee of the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on, which selects another name to replace the retired one.

The most recent names to be retired include Ian, which struck southwest Florida as a Category 5 hurricane in September 2022 with ferocious winds and storm surge as high as 15 feet. Ian killed more than 156 people in the U.S., the vast majority in Florida, according to a comprehens­ive NOAA report on the hurricane.

Other retired names include Katrina, Harvey, Charley, Wilma, Matthew, Michael and Irma.

What were the worst hurricanes to hit the U.S.?

In August 1992, powerful Hurricane Andrew struck south of Miami, crossing Florida and making a second landfall in Louisiana. For years, it was the costliest and most damaging hurricane to ever hit the U.S. coastline, resulting in about 65 reported deaths and causing more than $27.3 billion in damages at the time. The Category 5 storm destroyed more than 65,000 homes.

Hurricane Katrina, which struck Louisiana as a Category 3 storm in August 2005, still ranks as one of the most devastatin­g hurricanes to hit the United States. Katrina caused about 1,400 deaths and produced catastroph­ic damage along the Gulf Coast.

Hurricane Harvey struck Louisiana before moving into Houston as a Category 4 storm in 2017, causing severe flooding as it lingered for days. Harvey killed more than 80 people, including 50 in the Houston area.

According to the NOAA, Katrina and Harvey are listed as the two costliest U.S. hurricanes on record, with total costs of more than $160 billion and $125 billion, respective­ly.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? COURTNEY VERNON, 31, prays for her family’s home near the municipal pier in Naples, Fla., in September 2017 as Hurricane Irma was bearing down on the state. Irma is one of the retired hurricane names.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times COURTNEY VERNON, 31, prays for her family’s home near the municipal pier in Naples, Fla., in September 2017 as Hurricane Irma was bearing down on the state. Irma is one of the retired hurricane names.

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