El
Nino, a weather system that forms from warm ocean surface
temperatures in the central and eastern Pacific, increases
vertical wind shear, lessening or breaking up tropical storms.
"If a robust El Niño does not develop, the potential for an
active Atlantic hurricane season still exists," according to the
first outlook by Colorado State University (CSU) researchers.
The forecasters expect two major hurricanes, or those with wind
speeds of at least 111 miles per hour (179 kph), to develop out
of six hurricanes and 13 named storms.
An average Atlantic season has 14 named storms, seven hurricanes
and three major hurricanes.
Last year broke a six-year string of above-normal hurricane
seasons. CSU had estimated four major hurricanes but only two
developed, including Hurricane Ian that spawned 150 mph winds,
and hit Florida and South Carolina.
This year's storms have a higher chance of striking the U.S.
Gulf Coast rather than the Atlantic coast. CSU sees a 28% chance
for a Gulf Coast hit and a 22% chance for strikes to the
Atlantic coast, forecasters said.
Overall, there is a 44% chance for a strike along the U.S.
continental coastline and a 49% chance a major hurricane will
move through the Caribbean, Colorado State said.
Phil Klotzbach, who leads Colorado State's Tropical Meteorology
forecasters, said on Thursday that without the expected El Nino
development, warm ocean temperatures in the eastern Atlantic
would shape the Atlantic hurricane season that begins on June 1.
"Our forecast is really bullish and that's because of sea
surface temperatures, especially in the eastern Atlantic,"
Klotzbach said at the National Tropical Weather conference.
Warm waters in the eastern Atlantic provide an area for low
pressure systems coming off the west African coast to begin
developing into storms, Klotzbach said.
(Reporting by Erwin Seba; Editing by Sandra Maler and Richard
Chang)
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