Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

CSU predicts highly active hurricane season; Cyclone Phet approaching Oman
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 2:00 PM GMT on June 03, 2010 +4
A very active Atlantic hurricane season is on tap for 2010, according to the seasonal hurricane forecast issued June 2 by Dr. Phil Klotzbach and Dr. Bill Gray of Colorado State University (CSU). The CSU team is calling for 18 named storms, 10 hurricanes, and 5 intense hurricanes, and an Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) 185% of average. Between 1950 - 2000, the average season had 10 named storms, 6 hurricanes, and 2 intense hurricanes. But since 1995, the beginning of an active hurricane period in the Atlantic, we've averaged 14 named storms, 8 hurricanes, and 4 intense hurricanes per year. The new forecast is a step up from their April forecast, which called for 15 named storms, 8 hurricanes, and 4 intense hurricanes. The new forecast calls for a much above-average chance of a major hurricane hitting the U.S., both along the East Coast (51% chance, 31% chance is average) and the Gulf Coast (50% chance, 30% chance is average). The risk of a major hurricane in the Caribbean is also high, at 65% (42% is average.) This is the most aggressive early June forecast ever issued by the CSU group; the previous most aggressive such forecasts were for the 2006 and 2007 seasons, when the CSU team predicted 17 named storms, 9 hurricanes, and 5 intense hurricanes. Both of these forecasts did poorly, particularly the 2006 forecast, as only 10 named storms, 5 hurricanes, and 2 intense hurricanes were observed.

The forecasters cited four main reasons for an active season:

1) Weak La Niña conditions should develop by the most active portion of this year's hurricane season (August-October). The expected trend towards weak La Niña conditions should lead to reduced levels of vertical wind shear compared with what was witnessed in 2009.

2) Current SST anomalies are running at near-record warm levels. These very warm waters are associated with dynamic and thermodynamic factors that are very conducive for an active Atlantic hurricane season.

3) A weaker-than-normal Azores High prevailed during April-May. Weaker high pressure typically results in weaker trade winds that are commonly associated with more active hurricane seasons.

4) We are in the midst of a multi-decadal era of major hurricane activity, which began in 1995. Major hurricanes cause 80-85 percent of normalized hurricane damage.

Analogue years
The CSU team picked four previous years when atmospheric and oceanic conditions were similar to what we are seeing this year: weak El Niño to neutral conditions, well above-average tropical Atlantic SSTs, and above-average far North Atlantic SSTs during April - May. Those four years were 2005, the worst hurricane season of all time; 1969, the 3rd worst hurricane season of all time, featuring Category 5 Hurricane Camille which hit Mississippi; 1966, a relatively average year that featured Category 4 Inez that killed 1,000 people in Haiti; and 1958, a severe season with 5 major hurricanes. The mean activity for these five years was 17 named storms, 10 hurricanes, and 5 intense hurricanes, almost the same as the 2009 CSU forecast.

How accurate are the June forecasts?
The June forecasts by the CSU team over the past 12 years have had a skill 19% - 30% higher than a "no-skill" climatology forecast for number of named storms, number of hurricanes, and the ACE index (Figure 1). This is a decent amount of skill for a seasonal forecast, and these June forecasts can be useful to businesses such as the insurance industry and oil and gas industry that need to make bets on how active the coming hurricane season will be. Unfortunately, the CSU June 1 forecasts do poorly at forecasting the number of major hurricanes (only 3% skill), and major hurricanes are what do 80 - 85% of all hurricane damage (normalized to current population and wealth levels.) This year's June forecast uses the same formula as the past two years, which did quite well predicting the 2008 hurricane season (prediction: 15 named storms, 8 hurricanes, 4 intense hurricanes; observed: 16 named storms, 8 hurricanes, 5 intense hurricanes) and 2009 hurricane season (prediction: 11 named storms, 5 hurricanes, 2 intense hurricanes; observed: 9 named storms, 3 hurricanes, 2 intense hurricanes.) An Excel spreadsheet of their forecast skill (expressed as a mathematical correlation coefficient) show values from 0.44 to 0.58 for their June forecasts, which is respectable.


Figure 1. Comparison of the percent improvement over climatology for May and August seasonal hurricane forecasts for the Atlantic from NOAA, CSU and TSR from 1999-2009 (May) and 1998-2009 (August), using the Mean Squared Error. The British firm Tropical Storm Risk (TSR) will issue their outlook for the 2010 Atlantic hurricane season on June 4. Image credit: Verification of 12 years of NOAA seasonal hurricane forecasts, National Hurricane Center.

NOAA's 2010 hurricane season forecast
NOAA issued their forecast for the upcoming Atlantic hurricane season last week. As I discussed in my post on their forecast, NOAA is calling for very active and possibly hyperactive season. They give an 85% chance of an above-normal season, a 10% chance of a near-normal season, and just a 5% chance of a below-normal season. NOAA predicts a 70% chance that there will be 14 - 23 named storms, 8 - 14 hurricanes, and 3 - 7 major hurricanes, with an Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) in the 155% - 270% of normal range. If we take the midpoint of these numbers, NOAA is calling for 18.5 named storms, 11 hurricanes, 5 major hurricanes, and an ACE index 210% of normal. A season with an ACE index over 175% is considered "hyperactive."


Figure 2. Visible satellite image of Tropical Cyclone Phet on Thursday, June 3, 2010.

Tropical Cyclone Phet the 2nd strongest Arabian Sea storm on record
Record heat over southern Asia in May has helped heat up the Arabian Sea to 2°C above normal, and the exceptionally warm SSTs helped fuel Tropical Cyclone Phet into the second strongest tropical cyclone ever recorded in the Arabian Sea. Phet peaked at Category 4 strength with 145 mph winds yesterday, and has weakened slightly to 135 mph winds this morning. Only Category 5 Cyclone Gonu of 2007, which devastated Oman, was a stronger Arabian Sea cyclone.

Phet is over very warm waters of 30 - 31°C, and is under moderate wind shear of 10 - 20 knots. However, the storm is wrapping in dry air from the Arabian Peninsula, which has caused weakening. Visible satellite imagery from this morning (Figure 2) shows that the heavy thunderstorms on the north side of Phet have been eroded away by dry air. Phet is a small storm, and could fall apart fairly quickly if dry air can penetrate into its core. This should happen later today, since wind shear is on the increase, and the shearing winds should be able to disrupt the circulation enough that dry air can force its way into Phet's eyewall. Phet is fairly small, will miss the most heavily populated areas of Oman, and will likely undergo significant weakening before landfall, so the storm is unlikely to cause the kind of catastrophic flooding that Category 5 Cyclone Gonu of 2007 brought to Oman. Gonu killed 50 people and did $4.2 billion in damage. Phet's heaviest rains will be confined to a relatively sparsely populated region of Oman's coast. Rainfall amounts in excess of 6 inches in 18 hours (Figure 3) can be expected along Oman's coast today, which will likely cause extreme flooding.

After Phet's encounter with Oman, the storm will probably be at tropical storm strength when it makes its second landfall in Pakistan. Heavy rains from Phet will be the major danger for Pakistan, and serious flooding can be expected over southern Pakistan.


Figure 3. Forecast rain amounts for the 18-hour period ending at 2am EDT June 3, 2010. Image credit: NOAA/NESDIS.

Oil spill update
Onshore winds out of the south, southwest, or west are expected to blow over the northern Gulf of Mexico over most of the next week, resulting increased threats of oil to Alabama, Mississippi, and the Florida Panhandle, according to the latest trajectory forecasts from the State of Louisiana. The latest ocean current forecasts from the NOAA HYCOM model show that these winds will generate a 0.5 - 1 mph current flowing from west to east along the Florida Panhandle coast Sunday and Monday. If this current develops as predicted, it will be capable of bringing light amounts of oil as far east as Fort Walton Beach, Florida, by Monday. If you spot oil, send in your report to http://www.gulfcoastspill.com/, whose mission is to help the Gulf Coast recovery by creating a daily record of the oil spill.

Oil spill resources
My post, What a hurricane would do the Deepwater Horizon oil spill
My post Wednesday with answers to some of the common questions I get about the spill
My post on the Southwest Florida "Forbidden Zone" where surface oil will rarely go
My post on what oil might do to a hurricane
Gulf Oil Blog from the UGA Department of Marine Sciences
Oil Spill Academic Task Force
University of South Florida Ocean Circulation Group oil spill forecasts
ROFFS Deepwater Horizon page
Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery from the University of Miami

I'll be back Friday with an analysis of the new TSR hurricane forecast and a new forecast by a promising Florida State University model.

Jeff Masters
Categories: Hurricane
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403. Hurricanes101 5:27 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Nevermind Pat said it wont develop lol

lets talk about politics, global warming and religions instead

*sarcasm off*
Member Since: March 10, 2010 Posts: 1 Comments: 6930
404. Patrap 5:28 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
The Daily Downpour and Portlight Thursday at 3 p.m. ET, 12 noon PT. Listen here!

Posted by: shauntanner, 12:18 PM CDT on June 03, 2010
The best weather related show on the internet today at 4 p.m. ET, 1 p.m. PT today!
Listen here!

Weather Underground Meteorologists will talk about their No New Plastic Month challenge, as well as get you all caught up on National Weather and weather news topics. You will learn something and be entertained!
Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 377 Comments: 112968
405. lilElla 5:28 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
#370 - is that with or without butter?? :)

And I do remember the fans, we could have used them over the weekend in S. Wisconsin.
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406. JLPR2 5:28 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    


I see all is well today in the Eastern Atl.
:)
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407. BahaHurican 5:28 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Hi there. I actually can get on for a couple minutes!

We just had a nicely tropical downpour, courtesy, I suppose, of the nearby surface trough. I meant to get pics, but ran out of time...
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408. NRAamy 5:28 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!


;)
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409. Levi32 5:28 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Bastardi's videos just came out. Apparently he is also watching the western Gulf.
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410. Floodman 5:28 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting AwakeInMaryland:
Uh oh... is Keeper that bored? Or are things really that bad?


nope,. neither...that's a snapshot of the lurkers here, enjoying the "witty reparte"
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411. Levi32 5:29 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting Patrap:



Its a MCS..nothing tropical will come from it.



MCCs spark tropical trouble all the time. By climatology alone you are more likely to be right, but that doesn't mean write it off entirely.
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412. HurricaneSwirl 5:30 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting Floodman:


nope,. neither...that's a snapshot of the lurkers here, enjoying the "witty reparte"


darn... you got us ;)
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413. Hurricanes101 5:31 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting Levi32:


MCCs spark tropical trouble all the time. By climatology alone you are more likely to be right, but that doesn't mean write it off entirely.


yup they sure do
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414. Levi32 5:31 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
You guys saw this right....lol



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415. msgambler 5:32 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Good morning/afternoon/evening Floodman. Covering all my bases. Aussie got on to me for being wrong so I want to be right this time....hehehe
Member Since: February 27, 2010 Posts: 0 Comments: 1120
416. HurricaneSwirl 5:32 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting Levi32:
You guys saw this right....lol



WTH??
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418. Patrap 5:32 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 377 Comments: 112968
420. HyDrO420 5:33 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting TampaSpin:
http://tampaspinsweather.webs.com/oilspilllivevideofeed.htm

Live feed of Oil spill


Love the page!
Member Since: August 28, 2006 Posts: 0 Comments: 87
421. Hurricanes101 5:33 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting Jeff9641:


What the hell is that! I going to look at the models now as I have been slacking lately.


6Z run of the GFS
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423. Levi32 5:34 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting Jeff9641:


What the hell is that! I going to look at the models now as I have been slacking lately.


6z GFS lol.
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424. Patrap 5:34 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Oilzilla is Lurking in the GOM..








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425. Sarah10 5:34 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Hi everyone first time posting, StormW & Jeff9641 very informative I enjoy your posts!
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426. TampaSpin 5:36 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting HyDrO420:


Love the page!


Good i hope this help those wanting informed.
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427. Levi32 5:36 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting TropicalWave:
levi, can we see our first major form in july, in light of the expected conditions?


That would be hard to get, but it is possible with similar conditions to 2005, which had its first major (Dennis) in July. We'll see.
Member Since: November 24, 2005 Posts: 593 Comments: 25604
428. pottery 5:37 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
BAH!! The ROV saw is unable to cut that pc of obstructive steel away, so far....
Take a deep breath, guys, and think of something....
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430. AwakeInMaryland 5:37 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting HurricaneSwirl:


darn... you got us ;)


Not me, youse guys, I'm witless...

Does No New Plastic Month mean I can't dump my Citicard Mastercard for a better credit card?
Member Since: August 19, 2008 Posts: 32 Comments: 1918
431. Hurricanes101 5:37 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting Levi32:


That would be hard to get, but it is possible with similar conditions to 2005, which had its first major (Emily) in July. We'll see.


Dennis was actually the first major in 2005
Member Since: March 10, 2010 Posts: 1 Comments: 6930
432. CaneWarning 5:37 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting Jeff9641:


Yeah sat. presentation is excellent of this line and the lightning within this line is quite intense. I think the Tampa Bay area is going to get rocked later as I don't see this line weaking and if anything it maybe intensifying.


I hope so. We haven't had a good storm in a while.
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434. TampaSpin 5:38 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting pottery:
BAH!! The ROV saw is unable to cut that pc of obstructive steel away, so far....
Take a deep breath, guys, and think of something....


ya i seen that....they thought it was just hanging so they tried to hank it off it looked
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435. Levi32 5:38 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting Hurricanes101:


Dennis was actually the first major in 2005


Right...my bad. I was thinking Emily was first Cat 5 lol.
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437. JamesSA 5:39 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Cuttin' torch. ;-)
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438. RitaEvac 5:39 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Low pressure impressive looking on visible in SE TX. Give me that rain.
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439. masonsnana 5:40 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting DestinJeff:


EVERYBODY DO A SHOT!
LMAO!
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441. Hurricanes101 5:40 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
I actually think we will see our first major in July
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442. Levi32 5:40 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
The 6z GFS, obviously not to be taken too seriously, starts the development process with the tropical wave currently east of the Antilles, which according to the model gets into the western Caribbean in about 7 days.
Member Since: November 24, 2005 Posts: 593 Comments: 25604
443. HyDrO420 5:40 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting TampaSpin:


ya i seen that....they thought it was just hanging so they tried to hank it off it looked


Seems they should try to cut from the otherside.
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444. RitaEvac 5:41 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
nice eye feature on radar btw.
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445. Levi32 5:41 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting TropicalWave:


i thought it was a recent run, levi. then itw arrents no concern.


Does not matter if it's the latest run. They all change....the latest run is not always right.
Member Since: November 24, 2005 Posts: 593 Comments: 25604
446. pottery 5:41 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting JamesSA:
Cuttin' torch. ;-)

Why not??
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447. RickWPB 5:42 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Is this just a blip - or is it possible El Niño isn't really going away?

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448. Patrap 5:42 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 377 Comments: 112968
449. ElConando 5:42 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting pottery:
BAH!! The ROV saw is unable to cut that pc of obstructive steel away, so far....
Take a deep breath, guys, and think of something....


Question do you live in the Antilles?
Member Since: September 6, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 3709
450. Levi32 5:42 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
Quoting RickWPB:
Is this just a blip - or is it possible El Niño isn't really going away?



It's already gone.
Member Since: November 24, 2005 Posts: 593 Comments: 25604
451. RitaEvac 5:42 PM GMT on June 03, 2010    
eyewall NW of Houston, lol. whoo!
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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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