According to the European Center for Medium Weather Forecast, the upcoming Atlantic hurricane season may remain “near average” in the United States until September.
It is predicted that October will not be evaluated at the end of November. October is usually an active storm month.
Analysis is expected to be around 12 named Storms by September. According to the National Hurricane Center, the average season between 1991 and 2020 had 10 storms as of September, with a total of 14 storms.
ECMRW provides weather forecasts for member states and the EU space program, forecasting from September to September. According to the NHC, this is the average.
Phil Klotzbach, an Atlantic hurricane expert at Colorado State University, wrote on X that the predictions may be affected by two factors: neither La Niña nor Elniño will work. The conditions of LaNiña tend to contribute to hurricane formation, while the conditions of El Niño tend to suppress storms with wind shears.
Secondly, the sea surface temperature in the equatorial Atlantic Ocean, which is brewing by hurricanes, is expected to be close to normal. This is the opposite of 2023 and 2024, which sets hot water records. Warm water fuel hurricane.
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