2005 HURRICANE
SEASON
Forecaster predicts busy year for
storms
By Scott Dodd Knight Ridder
One of the nation's top hurricane forecasters is calling for
another active tropical storm season - but not as bad as last
year's, when system after system pounded Florida and flooded Western
North Carolina.
Colorado State's William Gray is predicting 13 named storms this
year. Seven will grow into hurricanes, he said, with three of those
becoming intense storms of Category 3 or above. Gray issued his
latest forecast Friday.
Last year, one of the most active in history, saw 15 tropical
storms, with nine becoming hurricanes - six of them intense.
The yearly average since 1950 is 9.6 named storms, with 5.9
hurricanes and 2.3 intense storms.
Tropical storms are named when they reach wind speeds of 39 mph
or more. They become hurricanes when their winds top 73 mph and are
considered intense storms at 111 mph.
Atlantic hurricane season runs from June through November.
Although Gray often is near the mark, he was a little off last
year.
He called for 13 named storms in 2004, with seven developing into
hurricanes, three of them intense. He missed by two named storms,
two hurricanes and three intense hurricanes.
What's creating so many strong storms? Forecasters think the
world is in the midst of a decades-long cycle of increased hurricane
activity, which began in the mid-1990s after about 30 years of
relative calm.
More tropical storms have formed in the past 10 years than in any
decade since the United States started keeping records in the
1870s.
This year is expected to be strong again because there's no
active El Nino in the Pacific Ocean, Gray says. In years when the
warm-water phenomenon is strong, it helps create winds across the
Atlantic that shear off the tops of hurricanes, robbing them of
their punch.
Water temperatures in the north Atlantic also are expected to be
warmer than usual this year, Gray says. Warm water is like jet fuel
for hurricanes.
A high-pressure system known as the Bermuda high - which can help
steer hurricanes toward the East Coast or away from it, depending on
its position - is likely to be in roughly the same place as last
year, when all those storms took aim at Florida.
Gray says there's a 73 percent chance that a major storm -
Category 3 or above - will make landfall along the U.S. coastline
this year. The average for the last century is 52 percent.
Among the factors Gray uses to make his forecast are "analog
years" - years when conditions are similar to those expected in the
upcoming season.
He said conditions for 2005 are likely to be comparable to 1995
and 2003, which were two of the five most active seasons of the last
50 years.
The '95 season saw 19 tropical storms and 11 hurricanes but
largely spared the Carolinas. In 2003, there were 16 named storms,
including Hurricane Isabel, which sliced through the Outer Banks and
brought devastation up the Eastern seaboard.
Last year also made the top five list for activity in the past
five decades. What made it stand out even more, though, were the
four hurricanes that hit Florida - a modern-day record for a single
state that experts say is unlikely to be matched any time soon.
Fifty-nine U.S. deaths and about 3,000 in Haiti were directly
attributed to tropical weather last season. Many of those fatalities
occurred well inland, in central Florida, rural North Carolina and
elsewhere.
While the Carolinas' coastline largely escaped pounding, the
season brought seven named tropical systems through North
Carolina.
Most traveled the inland route, coming up through Florida and the
Gulf states to soak the mountains. Fourteen N.C. residents died in
the resulting floods and landslides, which caused at least $200
million in damage.
North Carolina is considered vulnerable to hurricanes because of
the way it juts out into the Atlantic Ocean, like a chin waiting to
be punched by a boxer.
Since 1900, North Carolina has been hit by 29 hurricanes. Only
Florida, with 64, and Texas, with 38, have seen more.
South Carolina has had 16 hurricanes in that time period.
For a list of 2005
storm names, see Page 10C#HTMLInfoBox~~2005 storm
names
Arlene, Bret, Cindy, Dennis, Emily, Franklin, Gert, Harvey,
Irene, Jose, Katrina, Lee, Maria, Nate, Ophelia, Philippe, Rita,
Stan, Tammy, Vince,
Wilma |