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| Hurricane Melissa, October 2025 (Source: NOAA) |
Although hurricane season doesn’t officially get underway until June 1,
meteorologists and atmospheric scientists have already begun issuing outlooks
for the upcoming season.
NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center says ENSO-neutral conditions (the lack of El
Nino or La Nina conditions) currently exist, but will give way to El Nino
conditions over the summer. That means conditions for hurricane development
will become less favorable in the tropical Atlantic due to an increase in wind
shear and cooler sea surface temperatures.
Although water temperatures are warmer than average in the western Atlantic, they are a little cooler than normal in the central and eastern tropical Atlantic, according to NOAA. That’s down from the record warm sea surface temperatures in the tropical Atlantic in 2024 that also remained above average last season. Warm, tropical ocean water of 80° or greater is typically the benchmark necessary for tropical development, or for a hurricane to maintain its intensity.
Given these conditions, the meteorologists and tropical weather experts at Colorado State University (CSU), led by Dr. Philip Klotzbach, recently issued their April forecast for the upcoming season. They’re expecting a quieter than average 2026 season, with 13 tropical storms, of which 6 become hurricanes, including 2 major hurricanes.
An “average” Atlantic hurricane season features 14 tropical storms, 7 of which intensify into hurricanes with 3 major ones. That’s based on NOAA’s statistics for the 30-year period of 1991-2020. A “major” hurricane is a Category 3 or greater on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale with sustained winds of at least 111 mph.
More important than the overall number of named storms is where they track once they’ve developed. There have been active seasons with little or no significant impacts from tropical systems in the United States.
There have also been below average seasons when destructive and deadly storms have made landfall. Such was the case during the otherwise quiet 1992 season that saw only one major hurricane. However, Hurricane Andrew was a Category 5 storm that made landfall in the United States on August 24, 1992. Andrew remains one of the costliest natural disasters on record in the United States.
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