The
forecasters estimate between one and four major hurricanes
packing winds of 111 miles per hour (178.6 kph) could develop
during the 2018 season, which begins June 1.
The NOAA forecast also said about half of the 10 to 16 named
storms will be hurricane strength with winds of at least 74 mph
(119 kph).
An average Atlantic hurricane season produces 12 named storms of
which six become hurricanes, three of them major.
Private forecaster Weatherbell Analytics earlier this month
revised downward its forecast for named storms in 2018 from
between 11 and 15 to 9 to 13.
A system was brewing in the southern Gulf on Thursday that has a
70 percent chance of becoming a tropical cyclone, the U.S.
National Hurricane Center said. It is expected to bring heavy
rain to the southeast United States early next week and could
become the first named storm of the year as Alberto.
(Reporting by Erwin Seba; Editing by James Dalgleish)
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