logo
Hurricane season started two weeks ago. Where are the storms?

Hurricane season started two weeks ago. Where are the storms?

Boston Globe13-06-2025
But one usually arrives before the end of the month, and Phil Klotzbach, a hurricane expert at Colorado State University, said it was unclear when this year's first storm would form.
Here's a look at what's going on.
Advertisement
A storm gets a name when its sustained winds reach 39 miles per hour, and it becomes a Category 1 hurricane when they reach 74 miles per hour.
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
A key ingredient for that is warm ocean waters, with temperatures at 80 degrees or above, and Jason Dunion, a meteorologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said many locations across the Atlantic had not quite reached that threshold.
'The waters are still warming, and they're actually a little bit cooler than last year, so we're not seeing some of those record temperatures,' Dunion said. Sea surface temperatures set records last year, which also made hurricanes more likely to rapidly intensify and become more destructive.
Saharan dust carried from North Africa is another factor. It travels far across the Atlantic Ocean, creating a layer of dry air in the atmosphere that can suppress storm development. Dunion described the layer as a combination of 'superdry air that inhibits clouds, warm air that helps put a lid on clouds, and thunderstorm development, and a strong jet of winds that acts to tilt and tear thunderstorms apart.'
Advertisement
This week, a plume of dust spread from the central Atlantic all the way through the Caribbean, for more than 2,500 miles, which is roughly distance between Washington, D.C., and San Francisco.
'It's huge,' said Dunion, adding that conditions in large portions of the Atlantic just weren't favorable for hurricanes because of the dust plume.
The season for trans-Atlantic dust begins in June and tapers off in mid-August, just as hurricane activity usually picks up. Dunion calls mid-August the 'switch point.'
Klotzbach said wind shear had also been thwarting the formation of storms in the Gulf of Mexico, where tropical storms often form at this point in the season. Wind shear is the change of wind speed and direction with height, and it is notorious for shredding apart hurricanes and keeping tropical storms from developing.
Like NOAA, Klotzbach's team at Colorado State released a forecast this spring that predicted an above-average number of storms this year. But if the shear remains elevated for several more weeks, he said, he may scale back his forecast 'substantially.' On Wednesday, Klotzbach's team issued an update saying that, for now, it was standing by its earlier expectation.
In a typical season, there are 14 named storms. NOAA has predicted between 13 and 19 this year; Klotzbach's team expects there to be 17.
If the storm shear in the Gulf were to weaken and a storm were to move through the Caribbean or the Gulf, 'we certainly have plenty of fuel there to get a robust hurricane,' Klotzbach said.
Advertisement
In the eastern Pacific, where hurricane season began on May 15 and where storms typically form before they do in the Atlantic, has been off to a busy start. Four storms have formed off the west coast of North America: Alvin, Barbara, Cosme, and Dalila. Both seasons run through Nov. 30.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Weather Service is now hiring back hundreds of positions that got cut in the DOGE chaos
Weather Service is now hiring back hundreds of positions that got cut in the DOGE chaos

CNN

time2 hours ago

  • CNN

Weather Service is now hiring back hundreds of positions that got cut in the DOGE chaos

The National Weather Service has received permission to hire 450 meteorologists, hydrologists and radar technicians just months after being hit hard by Department of Government Efficiency-related cuts and early retirement incentives. The new hiring number includes 126 new positions that were previously approved and will apply to 'front-line mission critical' personnel, a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration official told CNN. The NWS cuts have spurred concerns over how well-prepared the country is to withstand hurricane season, which is just starting to heat up in the Atlantic. The staff reductions also have been scrutinized in the wake of the deadly Texas floods in July, with vacancies at weather service forecast offices there. The cuts to probationary employees, as well as early retirement incentives, meant the nation's front-line weather forecasting agency's staffing levels fell by more than 550 people since the second Trump administration began, to below 4,000 total employees. CNN has reached out to NOAA for comment. Agency employees are greeting the news, unveiled at an all hands meeting on Monday, with guarded optimism and relief. Current employees have been working additional hours with additional responsibilities since the layoffs and retirements earlier this year, trying to maintain the 24/7 posture US extreme weather requires. The agency has also been functioning with less data from fewer, less frequent weather balloon launches. The announcement was also met with frustration over the people the agency lost in the failed attempt at government savings. 'How much time/money is it going to cost to train a bunch of new people when we had already-trained people in place?' asked another NOAA official, who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media. It is possible that some of the new hires will have been previously trained employees who were let go in the DOGE cuts. The first NOAA official said there is going to be a focus on hiring in a smart, 'asymmetric' way that is 'based on workload.' The NWS, aided by lawmakers on Capitol Hill, had been arguing for months for a public safety exemption from the federal hiring freeze. That exemption has been granted, and the agency now has direct hiring authority under the Office of Personnel Management, the official told CNN. Direct hiring authority, according to OPM's website, can be given to federal agencies 'for filling vacancies when a critical hiring need or severe shortage of candidates exists.' It can help speed up the hiring process, the NOAA official said.

Weather Service is now hiring back hundreds of positions that got cut in the DOGE chaos
Weather Service is now hiring back hundreds of positions that got cut in the DOGE chaos

CNN

time2 hours ago

  • CNN

Weather Service is now hiring back hundreds of positions that got cut in the DOGE chaos

Job market DOGE Federal agenciesFacebookTweetLink Follow The National Weather Service has received permission to hire 450 meteorologists, hydrologists and radar technicians just months after being hit hard by Department of Government Efficiency-related cuts and early retirement incentives. The new hiring number includes 126 new positions that were previously approved and will apply to 'front-line mission critical' personnel, a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration official told CNN. The NWS cuts have spurred concerns over how well-prepared the country is to withstand hurricane season, which is just starting to heat up in the Atlantic. The staff reductions also have been scrutinized in the wake of the deadly Texas floods in July, with vacancies at weather service forecast offices there. The cuts to probationary employees, as well as early retirement incentives, meant the nation's front-line weather forecasting agency's staffing levels fell by more than 550 people since the second Trump administration began, to below 4,000 total employees. CNN has reached out to NOAA for comment. Agency employees are greeting the news, unveiled at an all hands meeting on Monday, with guarded optimism and relief. Current employees have been working additional hours with additional responsibilities since the layoffs and retirements earlier this year, trying to maintain the 24/7 posture US extreme weather requires. The agency has also been functioning with less data from fewer, less frequent weather balloon launches. The announcement was also met with frustration over the people the agency lost in the failed attempt at government savings. 'How much time/money is it going to cost to train a bunch of new people when we had already-trained people in place?' asked another NOAA official, who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media. It is possible that some of the new hires will have been previously trained employees who were let go in the DOGE cuts. The first NOAA official said there is going to be a focus on hiring in a smart, 'asymmetric' way that is 'based on workload.' The NWS, aided by lawmakers on Capitol Hill, had been arguing for months for a public safety exemption from the federal hiring freeze. That exemption has been granted, and the agency now has direct hiring authority under the Office of Personnel Management, the official told CNN. Direct hiring authority, according to OPM's website, can be given to federal agencies 'for filling vacancies when a critical hiring need or severe shortage of candidates exists.' It can help speed up the hiring process, the NOAA official said.

Tropical Storm Dexter Has Formed in the Atlantic — Here's Where It's Expected to Go and When
Tropical Storm Dexter Has Formed in the Atlantic — Here's Where It's Expected to Go and When

Yahoo

time20 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Tropical Storm Dexter Has Formed in the Atlantic — Here's Where It's Expected to Go and When

Forecasters believe the storm will continue moving in the same general direction over the next few daysNEED TO KNOW Tropical Storm Dexter has formed in the Atlantic, making it the fourth named storm of the season The storm developed late on Sunday, Aug. 3 and is expected to continue moving to the northeast NOAA has predicted there will be between 13 and 19 named storms in the Atlantic this hurricane season, which began June 1A new tropical storm has formed off the coast of the United States. Tropical Storm Dexter developed late on Sunday, Aug. 3, according to The Weather Channel and FOX Weather. As of the morning of Monday, Aug. 4, the storm was located about 250 miles west of Bermuda with maximum sustained winds of 45 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center (NHC) in Miami, Fla. By the afternoon, the storm was 275 miles away from Bermuda. The storm is currently moving northeast, away from the United States, at about 14 mph, a pattern that is expected to continue for the next few days. 'Some slight strengthening is forecast during the next couple of days,' forecasters said, 'but Dexter is likely to become a post-tropical cyclone by the middle to latter portion of this week.' Despite the fact that it's moving away from the United States, Fox Weather reported that rip tides will pose a threat to beachgoers across the East Coast from New York to South Florida. The storm is expected to dissipate in the Atlantic Ocean over the course of the week, according to Fox affiliate WTVT-TV. This is just the fourth named storm in the Atlantic since the hurricane season began on June 1. Storms are named once they reach tropical storm status, which occurs when a storm reaches maximum sustained surface winds of at least 39 mph, according to the National Weather Service (NWS). Earlier this year, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) predicted a 60% chance of an above-normal hurricane season in the Atlantic. The agency predicted there would be between 13 and 19 total named storms, with six to 10 of them becoming hurricanes. Three to five of those hurricanes are forecast to be major hurricanes, which have winds of 111 mph or higher. At the time, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said forecasters 'have never been more prepared for hurricane season.' 'NOAA and the National Weather Service are using the most advanced weather models and cutting-edge hurricane tracking systems to provide Americans with real-time storm forecasts and warnings,' Lutnick said. The NHC also says there is a chance for two more systems in the Atlantic to develop into tropical cyclones in the next week or so. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The first disturbance is located in the Central Atlantic, and has a 50% chance of developing within the next seven days as it heads west-northwest. Forecasters say it could develop into a tropical depression 'by the latter portion of this week." The second disturbance is located just off the coasts of northeastern Florida, Georgia and South Carolina. This 'broad area of low pressure' has a 30% chance of developing over the next seven days as it 'slowly moves' to the west. Read the original article on People

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store