National Hurricane Center Watching Area In Eastern Atlantic For Tropical Development In The Upcoming Week

National Hurricane Center Watching Area In Eastern Atlantic For Tropical Development In The Upcoming Week Jonathan Erdman August 30, 2025 at 9:26 PM The next tropical depression could develop in the eastern Atlantic as soon as the upcoming week, though a more active period for tropical storms and hu...

- - National Hurricane Center Watching Area In Eastern Atlantic For Tropical Development In The Upcoming Week

Jonathan Erdman August 30, 2025 at 9:26 PM

The next tropical depression could develop in the eastern Atlantic as soon as the upcoming week, though a more active period for tropical storms and hurricanes could hold off until at least mid-September, typically the peak time of the year in hurricane season.

The Next Tropical Wave

A cluster of thunderstorms and weak low pressure system known as a "tropical wave" is expected to move west off the African coast into the Atlantic Ocean Sunday.

These tropical waves are important because they are often the seeds of future tropical storms during hurricane season.

Possible NHC Development What Could Happen

This tropical wave will continue to move toward the west-northwest next week over the eastern Atlantic Ocean between Africa and the Lesser Antilles.

According to the National Hurricane Center, this tropical wave could undergo "some slow development" in the upcoming week.

However, this system may have to battle both wind shear and pockets of dry, stable air in the eastern Atlantic, both nemeses of tropical systems.

Even if it does develop, we have plenty of time to watch it. By the weekend of Sept. 6-7, it could still be hundreds of miles east of the Lesser Antilles.

Assuming it develops at all, it's far too soon to know if this system would ever pose a threat to the Caribbean or any part of the U.S. It could also simply recurve out into the open Atlantic beyond that time, as Tropical Storm Fernand just did.

The next Atlantic tropical storm will be named Gabrielle.

Currrent Wind Shear, NHC Development AreaWhen It Could Turn More Active

According to NOAA's Climate Prediction Center, activity could perk up in the Atlantic Basin starting in mid-September, and that could last for a few weeks.

That's when an environment more supportive of tropical development — including lower wind shear and more moist, unstable air — could gradually work its way into the Atlantic Basin.

That lines up with the typical mid-September peak of the Atlantic hurricane season.

hurricane season activity

So far this season, we've been pretty fortunate. We're near an average pace for both storms (six) and hurricanes (one). The season's only hurricane, so far — Erin — avoided a landfall, though it did bring flooding rain to the Leeward Islands, as well as coastal flooding, rip currents and some winds to the East Coast.

However, about 70% of the season's activity typically occurs from September onward.

Develop or refresh your hurricane plans now, while it's quiet, before a hurricane threatens.

2025 Season Hurricane Tracks, So Far

Jonathan Erdman is a senior meteorologist at weather.com and has been covering national and international weather since 1996. Extreme and bizarre weather are his favorite topics. Reach out to him on Bluesky, X (formerly Twitter) and Facebook.

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL General"

Read More


Source: CRETO MAG

Full Article on Source: CRETO MAG

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

 

CRETO HBR © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com