FORT COLLINS,
Colo. –
Hurricane
forecasters at
Colorado State
University on
Wednesday predicted
above-average
activity in the
Atlantic next year:
14 named storms,
including seven
hurricanes — three
major.
The 50-year average
is 9.6 named storms,
5.9 hurricanes and
2.3 major
hurricanes.
Researchers William
Gray
and Phil Klotzbach
said in their
extended-range
forecast there is a
63 percent chance
that at least one
major hurricane will
make landfall on the
U.S. coastline.
The long-term
average probability
is 52 percent.
This is Gray's 26th
year of forecasting
hurricanes. His
predictions are
watched closely by
emergency responders
and others, but many
say such long-range
forecasts don't have
a lot of practical
value beyond
focusing public
attention on the
dangers.
The hurricane season
runs from June 1 to
Nov. 30. Klotzbach
cautioned that the
December prediction
includes "a large
amount of
uncertainty" because
the season is so far
in the future.
Last December, Gray
and Klotzbach
predicted 13 named
storms for the 2008
season, including
seven hurricanes,
three of them major.
In June they revised
that to 15 named
storms, eight
hurricanes — four
major. The season
produced 16 named
storms, eight
hurricanes, with
five major.
Klotzbach said the
new forecast is
based on factors
including warm
Atlantic sea surface
temperatures and the
likely absence of
El Nino conditions.
El Nino
is a warming in the
Pacific Ocean
that can have such
far-reaching effects
as changing wind
patterns in the
eastern Atlantic,
which can disrupt
the formation of
hurricanes.