Hurricane center watching blip in Atlantic. No threat but hints at busy season ahead
The National Hurricane Center is already watching something in the Atlantic, and it’s only April.
The low-pressure area in question is a thousand miles away from inhabited land and expected to dissolve in the next few days, but it’s also a reminder that the upcoming hurricane season is poised to be an active one.
The season officially starts June 1 and runs through November, although the hurricane center has stated issuing regular daily outlooks in mid-May. Research suggests that the season could be seeing an earlier start due to climate change, which is helping warm the Atlantic Ocean and making it a friendlier place for storms to form earlier than normal.
And the Atlantic is hot this year. Really hot.
Sea surface temperatures near the disturbance are 24 degrees Celsius (about 75 Fahrenheit) when they’re usually around 21 degrees Celsius (70 Fahrenheit) this time of year, meteorologist Alex Boreham noted on Twitter.
The ocean heat content in the main development region of the Atlantic, the rectangular area where most storms develop and roll west toward the Caribbean and U.S., is currently at the average level for late June, according to records from Brian McNoldy, a senior research associate at the University of Miami.
The ocean heat content in the Atlantic Main Development Region (MDR) is as high today as it was on May 24 last year. And, it's as high as the average value on June 27. https://t.co/CdrzWVvKiZ pic.twitter.com/2E1p4SMOvR
— Brian McNoldy (@BMcNoldy) April 22, 2024
While the gold standard for hurricane season predictions from NOAA isn’t due until next month, early predictions from Colorado State University and others warn that the steamy Atlantic is likely to lead to an above-average season. CSU predicted that the Atlantic could see 23 named storms this year, completely using up the main list of storm names NHC uses.
A new prediction from Pennsylvania State University released Wednesday calls for even more storms — 33 this season alone. That would top the record of 30 named storms from 2020, when the hurricane center was forced to turn to the Greek alphabet to name the last few storms.
READ MORE: Steamy ocean means ‘a very, very busy season’ for hurricanes, early forecasts say
Both predictions account for higher-than-usual Atlantic temperatures and the likely formation of a La Niña later this year, an atmospheric phenomenon that is linked with more storms forming in the Atlantic basin.
As for the first blip of the season, forecasters give it a slim chance — 10% — of surviving the next few days.
“Development is NOT EXPECTED, but this serves as a reminder that season (and a potentially early season is fast approaching),” tweeted Megan Borowski, lead meteorologist for Florida Storms.
The first name on the hurricane list this year is Alberto.