2009 hurricane predictions, plus storm names

div class=image style=float:right;padding-left:8px;img alt=Tropical Depression height=230 src=http://l.yimg.com/a/feeds/us/grn/green_daily_news/tropical-depression-one-md.jpg width=300/br /emTropical Depression One formed in the br /Atlantic several days before the official br /start of the 2009 hurricane season. br /(Photo: NOAA)/embr /br //divpThe Atlantic Ocean’s first tropical depression is moving far off the U.S. East Coast, and the June 1 official start of the hurricane season is upon us. The tropical depression, which formed May 28, isn’t likely to form into a tropical storm, so it won’t be given a name./ppLast year, the Atlantic saw 16 named tropical storms — from Tropical Storm Arthur on May 30, which killed five and caused $78 million in damages on Belize, to Hurricane Paloma, which formed Nov. 5 and struck Cuba as a Category 4 monster that was the second-most intense hurricane ever recorded in November. /ppAll in all, there were eight Atlantic hurricanes and storms caused an estimated $41 billion in damages and left hundreds dead — more than 800 in Haiti alone./ppThe eastern Pacific saw 16 named storms, seven of them hurricanes, starting with Tropical Storm Alma on May 29 and ending Nov. 5 when Tropical Storm Polo petered out./ppThe a href=http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/2008-hurricane-season-470703082008 hurricane season/a produced several a href=http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/extreme-weather-20081217record-breaking storms/a, including Tropical Storm Alma (the easternmost named storm ever to form in the Pacific) and Hurricane Bertha (the longest-lived Atlantic tropical storm on record). Four storms were notable — or deadly — enough that the names were retired: a href=http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/hurricane-names-retired-47050502Alma, Gustav, Ike, and Paloma/a. /ppHurricane Gustav caused $4 billion damage in Louisiana and killed 112 people, including 77 in Haiti. Hurricane Ike was the season’s strongest hurricane and the third-costliest storm (more than $19 billion) to hit the U.S., devastating Galveston, Texas, and causing about 100 deaths in the Caribbean and along the U.S. Gulf Coast./ppWhat’s in store for 2009?/ppstrong2009 hurricane forecast/strong/ppIf and how global warming influences hurricane frequency or intensity is still a matter of genuine scientific debate. In recent years, scientists have at least identified several factors — from the extent of rainfall in Africa to the presence or absence of El Nino conditions in the Pacific — that help them predict the intensity of a hurricane season ahead of time. Here’s what the two most prominent forecasters have to say:/ppThe federal government has predicted a near normal hurricane season for the Atlantic, with a 25% chance of above-normal outbreaks and 25% chance of below-normal outbreaks — though overall, forecasters expressed a greater degree of uncertainty this year than they have in past years. The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration’s a href=http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2009/20090521_atlantichurricane.html target=_blankpredicts/a a 70% chance of:/pullistrongNamed storms:/strong 9-14/lilistrongHurricanes:/strong 4-7/lilistrongMajor hurricanes:/strong 1-3/li/ulpThe other major forecaster in the U.S., Colorado State University, recently a href=http://hurricane.atmos.colostate.edu/Forecasts/ target=_blankrevised down/a its expectations for the 2009 Atlantic hurricane season: /pullistrongNamed storms:/strong 12/lilistrongHurricanes:/strong 6/lilistrongMajor hurricanes:/strong 2/li/ulpFurther, the Colorado forecasters predicted the following probabilities that a major hurricane could strike the U.S., all of which are about average for the past century:/pullistrongEntire U.S. coastline:/strong 54%/lilistrongU.S. East Coast (including /strongstrongFlorida /strongstrongpeninsula):/strong 32%/lilistrongGulf Coast (from the Florida Panhandle westward to Brownsville, Texas):/strong 31%/lilistrongCaribbean:/strong Average/li/ulpForecasters warn that the number of storms and their intensity is only one key determinant of risk of property damage and loss of life: The biggest factor is who lives in harm’s way and how well they prepare. Some 35 million U.S. residents live in hurricane-prone regions, and experts urge them to a href=http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/HAW2/english/disaster_prevention.shtml target=_blankprepare/a./ppWhen those storms do come, they will be given names. Tropical cyclones are given names when they achieve tropical storm strength, with sustained winds of at least 39 mph. Hurricanes are tropical storms that have sustained winds that exceed 74 mph, and major hurricanes have sustained winds that exceed 111 mph. /ppHere are the tropical storm and hurricane names for 2009:/ppstrong2009 hurricane and tropical storm names – Atlantic/strongbr //polliAna/liliBill/liliClaudette/liliDanny/liliErika/liliFred/liliGrace/liliHenri/liliIda/liliJoaquin/liliKate/liliLarry/liliMindy/liliNicholas/liliOdette/liliPeter/liliRose/liliSam/liliTeresa/liliVictor/liliWanda/li/olp /ppstrong2009 hurricane and tropical storm names – Eastern North Pacific/strongbr //polliAndres/liliBlanca/liliCarlos/liliDolores/liliEnrique/liliFelicia/liliGuillermo/liliHilda/liliIgnacio/liliJimena/liliKevin/liliLinda/liliMarty/liliNora/liliOlaf/liliPatricia/liliRick/liliSandra/liliTerry/liliVivian/liliWaldo/liliXina/liliYork/liliZelda /li/olp /ppemNote: this story originally misstated the name of Colorado State University. The error was corrected June 2./em/pp /ppstrongMore from The Daily Green/strong/pullia href=http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/extreme-weather-20081217?link=reldom=yah_greensrc=syncon=artmag=tdgThe Most Extreme Weather of 2008/a/lilia href=http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/2008-hurricane-season-47070308?link=reldom=yah_greensrc=syncon=artmag=tdg2008 Hurricane Yearbook/a/lilia href=http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/citizen-science-47121401?link=reldom=yah_greensrc=syncon=artmag=tdgWeather Watching Other Citizen Science Programs/a/lilia href=http://www.thedailygreen.com/archive/weird-weather/weather_categories/pictures/0/24/?link=reldom=yah_greensrc=syncon=artmag=tdgWeird Weather Watch: Add Your Observations/a/lilia href=http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/hurricane-names-retired-47050502?link=reldom=yah_greensrc=syncon=artmag=tdgFour Hurricane Names Retired After 2008 Season/a/li/ulpemReprinted with permission of Hearst Communications, Inc /em/p

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