National Hurricane Center, Atlantic and Barbara
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The National Hurricane Center is monitoring two tropical waves in the Atlantic: Tropical wave 1: A tropical wave located at 37W from 02N-12N in the central Atlantic is moving west at 11 mph. Tropical wave 2: A central Atlantic tropical wave east of the Caribbean Sea has its axis along 57W south of 17N, is moving west at 11 to 17 mph.
16hon MSN
Experts are predicting the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season to be “above-normal” this year, as scientists say warm sea surface temperatures may lead to more frequent and intense storms, urging those along the East Coast to be prepared.
The low-pressure area the NHC has been monitoring off Florida's eastern coast will bring heavy rain to the Carolinas before fizzling out.
For the ninth day of the 2025 hurricane season, the Atlantic basin remains very quiet. Saharan dust is still covering a big part of the Atlantic limiting tropical activity and the Gulf & Caribbean remain quiet.
State Climatologist Jay Grymes said the disturbance is not likely to be an issue for Louisiana or the East Coast.
The National Hurricane Center is monitoring an area near the Atlantic coast of Georgia and the Carolinas for potential tropical cyclone development.
We made it through the first week of Hurricane Season without 'tropical trouble'. Here's why it's been so quiet.
From the details behind this year's forecast to how to prepare, here's everything you need to know about the 2025 hurricane season.
For the fourth consecutive year, the Atlantic hurricane season kicks off without a named storm forming before June 1, and there are no immediate signs of formation. The Atlantic Basin hurricane season spans 183 days,
This would put the Pacific basin far ahead of the Atlantic, but this is not unusual. Typically, the Eastern Pacific will see these bursts of activity early on in their season, especially when our side is quiet.