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THE 2OO7 HURRICANE SEASON PREDICTED TO BE VERY ACTIVE |
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Friday, 15 June 2007 |
Science Daily — The U.S.
Atlantic basin will likely
experience a very active
hurricane season, the Colorado
State University
forecast team announced
today, increasing its earlier
prediction for the 2007
hurricane season.
The team's forecast now
anticipates 17 named storms
forming in the Atlantic basin
between June 1 and Nov. 30.
Nine of the 17 storms are predicted
to become hurricanes,
and of those nine, five are
expected to develop into
intense or major hurricanes
(Saffir/Simpson category 3-4-
5) with sustained winds of
111 mph or greater.
No hurricanes made landfall
along the U.S. coastline in
2006. The 2006 season witnessed
a total of 10 named
storms, 5 hurricanes and two
major hurricanes. The 2005
season, considered unusual
by the Colorado State forecast
team, witnessed 27
named storms, 15 hurricanes
and seven intense hurricanes.
Long-term averages
are 9.6 named storms, 5.9
hurricanes and 2.3 intense
hurricanes per year.
"We are calling for a very
active hurricane season this
year, but not as active as the
2004 and 2005 seasons," said
Phil Klotzbach of the Colorado
State hurricane forecast
team. "Based on our latest
forecast, the probability of
a major hurricane making
landfall along the U.S. coastline
is 74 percent compared
with the last-century average
of 52 percent.
"In December and January,
we had a weak to moderate
El Nino event in the tropical
Pacific Ocean. When you
have El Nino conditions during
the hurricane season, it
increases vertical wind shear
across the tropical Atlantic
and typically results in a
weaker tropical cyclone season,"
Klotzbach said. "However,
we've seen El Nino conditions
dissipate quite rapidly
late this winter, so we do
not think that's going to be
an inhibiting factor this year.
Also, we have warm Atlantic
sea surface temperatures
this year which we've seen
just about every year since
1995."
The hurricane forecast team
predicts tropical cyclone
activity in 2007 will be 185
percent of the average season.
By comparison, 2005
witnessed tropical cyclone
activity that was about 275
percent of the average season.
The hurricane forecast team
reiterated its probabilities for
a major hurricane making
landfall on U.S. soil:
A 74 percent chance that
at least one major hurricane
will make landfall on the
U.S. coastline in 2007 (the
long-term average probability
is 52 percent).
A 50 percent chance that
a major hurricane will make
landfall on the U.S. East
Coast, including the Florida
Peninsula (the long-term
average is 31 percent)
A 49 percent chance that
a major hurricane will make
landfall on the Gulf Coast
from the Florida Panhandle
west to Brownsville (the longterm
average is 30 percent).
The team also predicted
above-average major hurricane
landfall risk in the
Caribbean.
"We were quite fortunate last
year in that we had no hurricane
landfalls," Klotzbach
said. "The 2006 season was
only the 12th year since 1945
that the United States witnessed
no hurricane landfalls.
Since then, we have had
only two consecutive-year
periods where there were no
hurricane landfalls - 1981-
1982 and 2000-2001."
The Colorado State hurricane
forecast team has cautioned
against reading too much
into the hurricane seasons of
2004 and 2005 when Florida
and the Gulf Coast were ravaged
by four landfalling hurricanes
each year. Hurricanes
Charley, Frances, Ivan
and Jeanne caused devastating
damage in 2004 followed
by Dennis, Katrina, Rita and
Wilma in 2005.
"The activity of these two
years was unusual, but within
the natural bounds of hurricane
variation," said
William Gray, who began
forecasting hurricane seasons
at Colorado State 24
years ago. "Following the two
very active seasons of 2004
and 2005, 2006 experienced
slightly below-average activity
with no landfalling hurricanes.
"We've had an upturn of
major storms since 1995,"
Gray said. "We think this
upturn of major storms will
continue for another 15 or 20
years."
Probabilities of tropical
storm-force, hurricane-force
and intense hurricane-force
winds occurring at specific
locations along the U.S. East
and Gulf Coasts within a
variety of time periods are
listed on the forecast team's
Landfall Probability Web
site. The site provides U.S.
landfall probabilities for 11
regions, 55 sub-regions and
205 individual counties along
the U.S. coastline from
Brownsville, Texas, to Eastport,
Maine. The Web site,
available to the public at
http://www.e-transit.org/hurricane,
is the first publicly
accessible Internet tool that
adjusts landfall probabilities
for regions, sub-regions and
counties based on the current
climate and its projected
effects on the upcoming hurricane
season. Klotzbach and
Gray update the site regularly
with assistance from the
GeoGraphics Laboratory at
Bridgewater State College in
Massachusetts.
The hurricane team's forecasts
are based on the
premise that global oceanic
and atmospheric conditions -
such as El Niño, sea surface
temperatures and sea level
pressures - that preceded
active or inactive hurricane
seasons in the past provide
meaningful information
about similar trends in
future seasons.
For 2007, Gray and the hurricane
forecast team expect
continued warm tropical and
north Atlantic sea-surface
temperatures, prevalent in
most years since 1995, as
well as neutral or weak La
Nina conditions - a recipe for
greatly enhanced Atlantic
basin hurricane activity.
These factors are similar to
conditions that occurred during
the 1952, 1964, 1966,
1995 and 2003 seasons. The
average of these five seasons
had well above-average activity,
and Klotzbach and Gray
predict the 2007 season will
have activity in line with the
average of these five years.
Gray does not attribute
changes in recent and projected
Atlantic hurricane
activity to human-induced
global warming.
"Although global surface
temperatures have increased
over the last century and
over the last 30 years, there
is no reliable data available
to indicate increased hurricane
frequency or intensity in
any of the globe's seven tropical
cyclone basins, except for
the Atlantic over the past 12
years," Gray said. "Meteorologists
who study tropical
cyclones have no valid physical
theory as to why hurricane
frequency or intensity
would necessarily be altered
significantly by small
amounts of global mean temperature
change."
Note: This story has been
adapted from a news release
issued by Colorado State University.

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