Atlantic forecast quiet
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About a week into the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season, here are five things that Floridians should know.
The first full week of the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season will close without any named storms. While that might feel unusual based on recent, early-blooming seasons – with 8 of the last 11 hurricane seasons notching the first tropical or subtropical storm before June 1 – a longer view of history shows us it’s not uncommon.
The 2026 Atlantic hurricane season is quickly approaching, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is releasing its forecast for what to expect.
Meteorologists predict a developing El Nino could dampen the upcoming Atlantic hurricane season, but it won't eliminate storms.
Below-average forecast: NOAA projects 8-14 named storms for 2026, with 3-6 hurricanes, as El Niño and Saharan dust suppress early-season activity despite warm seas. El Niño's influence: Stronger wind shear and atmospheric stability from El Niño ...
While the Atlantic region may catch a break this year, the Eastern Pacific could face more storms — and FEMA is going into this hurricane season with far less staff.
The Atlantic is suddenly buzzing with tropical activity. Hurricane Gabrielle is a strong Category 3 storm east of Bermuda, and two more potential tropical systems — one nearing the Caribbean and another farther east — could follow this week. Neither ...