It’s going to be a modestly more active than average Atlantic hurricane season in 2008, according to the December seasonal forecast issued by Dr. William Gray and Phil Klotzbach of Colorado State University (CSU). The CSU team is calling for 13 named storms, 7 hurricanes, 3 intense hurricanes, and an ACE index 20% above average (Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) is a measure of the total destructive power of a hurricane season, based on the number of days strong winds are observed). An average season has 10 named storms, 6 hurricanes, and 2 intense hurricanes. The CSU forecast calls for a 15% above average chance of a major hurricane hitting the U.S. The odds for a major East Coast hurricane are put at 37% (a 31% chance is average), and odds for the Gulf Coast are 36% (30% chance is average). The CSU team predicts that the current moderate La Nina event will weaken by the 2008 hurricane season, but still contribute to lower than average values of wind shear. In addition, warm sea surface temperatures are likely to continue in the tropical and North Atlantic during 2008, due to the fact that we are in a positive phase of the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO), which began in 1995.
The forecasters examined the observed atmospheric conditions and ocean temperatures in October-November 2007, and came up with a list of five past years that had a similar combination of a moderate La Nina event, near average tropical Atlantic sea surface temperatures (SSTs), and warm far North Atlantic SSTs. Expect 2008 to be similar to the average of these five analogue years, they say. The five years were 2000 (14 named storms, 8 hurricanes, 3 intense hurricanes), 1999 (12, 8, and 5 of the same), 1989 (11, 7 and 2), 1956 (8, 4 and 2), and 1953 (14, 6 and 4). Hurricane Hugo of 1989 (Category 4) was the strongest hurricane to hit the U.S. in these five analogue years.
The following names will be used for named storms that form in the North Atlantic in 2008:
Arthur, Bertha, Cristobal, Dolly, Edouard, Fay, Gustav, Hanna, Ike, Josephine, Kyle, Laura, Marco, Nana, Omar, Paloma, Rene, Sally,Teddy, Vicky, Wilfred.
The names not retired from this list will be used again in the 2014 season. The list is the same as the 2002 list except for Ike and Laura which will replace Isidore and Lili, respectively.
PredictionsThe studied parameters are in particular:
Currently, one is located rather in a moderate phase of La Niña, which should continue in 2008, and which causes to increase the cyclonic activity on our areas of the Atlantic.
According to the anomalies compared to the seasonal average of these various parameters, P. Klotzbach and W. Gray seek the years in the past closest to these conditions observed: years 1952, 1955, 1988, 1998 and 1999 were appointed. And thus, starting from the activity observed during the years which followed (1953, 1956, 1989, 1999, 2000), they calculate how will be, during the summer 2008 on the zone of the Atlantic, the winds trade winds (around 600/800 m of altitude), the winds in high troposphere (around 12000 m of altitude), the temperature of the sea, the barometric pressures of surface.
All these weather parameters should be, according to them, rather favorable to the formation of the tropical cyclones. The figures selected then are a scientist proportioning between the average of the activity observed during the above mentioned similar years, together with a coefficient of adjustment to hold account of the strong activity noted since 1995 on the areas considered (due to 20/30 years a natural cycle already highlighted).
Of course, and let us not hesitate to point out it, it is necessary to take these figures as what they are, results of the theoretical studies at statistical base, and to be satisfied to interpret them like a general tendency, without retaining the exact values of them. The more so as it is known that the assessments of end of the year are generally quite different from these figures announced at the beginning of season.
In 2005, as in 2006, and even still for the past year 2007, the forecasts were rather far away from reality all the same: a large undervaluation in 2005, an over-estimate in 2006 and even in 2007…. But one can however announce that in the current state of knowledge of the atmosphere during the autumn 2007, of many indices agree so that one can expect one year cyclonic 2008 on the Atlantic rather active, but a little less than the 13 last years average.
These are finally probabilities that certain territories will be affected by an intense hurricane in 2008:
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