A quiet weekend for us, but some hints of development in the Atlantic next week

Headlines

  • Quiet for the next 5 days in the Atlantic.
  • Continuing to watch a potential tropical wave later next week in the Western Atlantic.

Watching the next wave

Hello from 35,000 feet! Just scoping out the atmosphere on my way back to the Gulf Coast. Anyway, let’s take a look at what’s doing in the tropics heading into another summer weekend

The National Hurricane Center has a clean outlook map for the next 7 days across the Atlantic. There has been some noise coming from some models for this wave in the far eastern Atlantic today.

A tropical wave in the far eastern Atlantic off Africa is getting some models enthused about tropical development later next week. (RadarScope)

The wave is currently in an atmosphere that is dominated by dust. Or at least the road in front of it is. As the wave approaches the Caribbean or southwest Atlantic later next week, it will have some dry air to fend off. The forecast from last night’s European model shows this rather well. I’m using this to illustrate what the environment may be like when it gets to that general location, not where I think it will specifically be or what it will exactly look like. So take this with a grain of salt. Or Saharan dust.

A look at where the eastern Atlantic wave could be next week, primarily focusing on the environment it’s in. Dry air and at least some wind shear will likely be in place. (Tropical Tidbits)

So yeah, this probably bears a bit of watching. But there is nothing to say that this will definitely develop into something yet. Ensemble support for this is growing somewhat, though again, no models really shoot this to the moon yet. Still, with a tropical wave in a marginally favorable environment in early August, I will at least continue to watch this.

Ensemble modeling from the Euro model earlier this morning shows lukewarm but meaningful support for something existing in the western Atlantic later next week. We will watch. (Weathernerds.org)

Outside of that, we continue to watch for the August increase. There are no other specific concerns we see at this time. Let’s check back in on this tomorrow or Sunday.

Signs of the Atlantic calm slowly breaking in early August

Headlines

  • Quiet tropics are expected to continue into the end of July.
  • Some signs of a potential tropical wave to monitor in the western Atlantic in early August.
  • More activity is expected to pick up in mid to late August.

Calm continues a little longer

The tropics continue to look pretty quiet over the next week or so, with no areas worth watching at this time.

Calendar flips into more action?

As we head into August, as we’ve been warning, it does look like the dam will begin to break, slowly at first but with perhaps more voracity as August progresses.

Yesterday afternoon’s week 2 and 3 outlook from the Climate Prediction Center do highlight the Atlantic for tropical potential north of 20 percent.

The week 2-3 tropical hazards outlook from the Climate Prediction Center highlight the western Atlantic and Caribbean through mid-August for possible development. (NOAA CPC)

This makes sense on a couple levels. As we noted the other day, it does look like a more favorable “background state” is on the way to the Atlantic basin. Additionally, there is some “buzz” in the modeling looking toward the Bahamas late next week or weekend. The Euro has been on this one for a bit, with the operational model guidance periodically showing something, including at midday today. The ensemble guidance is much less enthusiastic about this, as you can see from the 00z European EPS looking at the IQR difference map from Tomer Burg’s excellent site.

The Euro ensemble IQR difference, which indicates ensemble spread is pretty calm for later next week, with only about 5 or 6 of the 51 ensemble members even showing low pressure. (Tomer Burg)

This really lacks much support from elsewhere at this time. The GFS and its ensemble generally shows little in this region. Even the ICON (for now), which tends to overforecast in the tropics but nailed Beryl in the Gulf doesn’t have a particularly strong signal. That said, wind shear looks relatively modest next week. However, dry air may be in plentiful supply around the area with significant dust in the basin right now, which would limit development. I would say that I can understand modeling picking up on this area for possible development, but I do not necessarily think this merits significant concern at the moment. We’ve got some time, so let’s continue to watch for an uptick in showers and storms in the Bahamas late next week or weekend.

Elsewhere, we continue to see hints of more aggressive change later in August, with European weekly data now showing above normal tropical activity by late month. Not much else we can say at this point, except to make sure you’ve got your season preps complete or soon to be completed as we white knuckle our way into later August.

Another week of calm in the Atlantic, but an August flip continues to look likely

Headlines

  • Quiet Atlantic basin for another week.
  • Signs of change continue to persist in early August.
  • Mid-August could be quite busy.

Happening in the Atlantic

It’s quiet out there again today.

There is nothing of consequence in the Atlantic at this time. (College of DuPage)

There is a smattering of showers across the Atlantic but no organized waves. The Caribbean is quiet. The Gulf is mostly quiet. There is an area of thunderstorms in the Bay of Campeche. Nothing is expected to come of that area, but with thunderstorms pestering the Gulf Coast all week and this down there, you just don’t like to totally take your eyes off this area during hurricane season. Just in case.

But in general, the next 5 to 7 days look to be void of any organized tropical activity in the Atlantic, Caribbean, or Gulf.

When will this change?

The short answer: Probably after the first few days in August.

The longer answer: Let’s dive into the weeds a bit. If we look at the background state of the atmosphere in the Atlantic, it’s dominated by sinking air, which is indicated on the chart below by orange and red coloring. However, as we go into early August, I’ve circled an area of migrating rising air. You can match it to the global map below. Notice how over the next two weeks, that area of rising air in the background maneuvers its way from Indonesia to about Central America.

A plot known as a “Hovmoller” showing the Atlantic currently run by sinking air (red/orange color), but with rising air approaching by early August (blue color). (StormVista)

As this rising air moves in, it will gradually tinge the background state of the Atlantic to be more hospitable to tropical systems. Sinking air tends to suppress storm development, whereas rising air promotes it, and as this rising air passes, it will help seed the Atlantic to get ready for action as August progresses.

Could this change? Of course, but in general, this makes sense meteorologically, and this gives us some confidence that it will get busy. And given the current absurdly warm water temperatures across the entire basin, it could get quite busy.

For now, enjoy another week of general calm, and once we see signs of something we’ll address it. Look for our next update on Wednesday or Thursday.

Hurricane Beryl and the fallacy of “it’s only a category one hurricane”

Headlines

  • Hurricane Beryl was “only a category one” storm, so how did it cause so many issues?
  • Today’s post tries to bust the myth of “it was only a category one.”

Hurricane Katrina’s first rodeo

Back in August of 2005, South Florida was struck by a hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 80 mph. The storm made landfall near the border of Miami-Dade and Broward Counties. It killed 14 and caused the 2024 equivalent of $1 billion in damage. It was Hurricane Katrina, and while the storm is obviously remembered for the horror it inflicted on the Gulf Coast, Katrina’s first act was to catch South Florida a bit off-guard. Katrina dumped 10 to 20 inches of rain and knocked out power to about 1.5 million Floridians.

August 26, 2005 front page of The Miami Herald, after Katrina dealt a category 1 blow to South Florida. (Miami Herald)

Katrina intensified from about a 50 mph tropical storm to an 80 mph hurricane in the 24 hours leading up to landfall in South Florida. By the time it re-emerged into the Gulf of Mexico, it had only lost a bit of intensity. You can view a great radar loop from Brian McNoldy’s archive here, and you can see how the storm really got its act together right at landfall.

Katrina approaching the coast of South Florida in 2005 as a category 1 hurricane. (NOAA)

There have been numerous category one hurricanes that have hit land over the years. Yes, most are generally well-behaved. Most cause some damage but not exceptionally long-term disruption. Katrina bucked this trend somewhat, and early this month, Beryl did the same for Houston.

During Katrina, winds gusted to 97 mph in Homestead, 94 mph in Virginia Key, 82 mph in Fort Lauderdale, and 78 mph in Miami. During Beryl, winds gusted to 97 mph just near Freeport, 85 mph in Angleton, 78 mph in Galveston, 84 mph at Hobby Airport, 83 mph at Bush Airport, and 89 mph at the University of Houston. In some ways, Katrina and Beryl make for a nice case study of like-minded category ones. And they also blow away the myth of “it’s only a category one.”

The usefulness of the Saffir-Simpson Scale

For hurricanes, we’ve long relied on the Saffir-Simpson scale to guide us in terms of the definitive categorization of intensity.

The Saffir-Simpson Scale (NOAA)

It’s a great tool for bucketing hurricanes in terms of their strength. Category 5 storms like first ballot hall of famers Andrew, Camille, and Michael generally fit the idea of the scale nicely. It tends to work even better when you consider “major” hurricanes, those that are category 3 and higher. The vast majority of memorable, devastating storms will fall into those buckets.

The uselessness of the Saffir-Simpson Scale

While the scale has true scientific value, many disparate voices within the meteorology and social science communities and beyond have long argued that the Saffir-Simpson Scale falls short in conveying the true threat to the public from a given hurricane. Think about Hurricane Harvey. It was a category 4 hurricane with massive damage on the Middle Texas Coast. By the time it arrived in Houston, it was a tropical storm, but it produced arguably the worst flooding event in Texas history. Hurricane Agnes in 1972 was only a category 1 storm but ended up being the costliest hurricane in American history at the time. The Saffir-Simpson scale, for all its usefulness is based on one variable and one variable only: Maximum sustained wind. If you have a 25 mile radius of hurricane winds that hit 155 mph winds, you have a category 4 hurricane. Whereas a storm like Hurricane Sandy before it was classified as extratropical was “only” a category 1 storm with 85 to 90 mph winds but had a wind field that sent hurricane winds out 175 miles from the center. Which storm is capable of more damage? Or are they capable of equal damage?

Thankfully, most meteorologists recognize this and tend to focus on the impacts more than the category of the storm.

Beryl came in like a wrecking ball

This brings us to Beryl. Right off the top here, let me explain some Matt philosophy for you. Prior to Beryl, Matt believed that things would generally be fine in Houston during category 1 or 2 hurricanes because once they arrived in the city, we’d have gusty winds, some power outages, and scattered damage. But overall, we’d get back up on our feet rather quickly. I even basically said as much literally a few hours before Beryl’s eyewall moved into Houston.

Preliminary peak wind gust and direction map for Beryl. (Jay Shafer/DisasterTech)

Yes, we did see the forecast 40 to 80 mph wind gusts, but it was more like 60 to 90 mph over the entire metro area. I believed we’d fare well, given that Hurricane Ike, a much larger and somewhat stronger storm in 2008 knocked out power to 2 million customers for up to 2 weeks, even though most of the Houston metro experienced the western (weaker) side. I figured, Beryl, smaller, weaker, but the dirty side…we’ll have outages and some damage, but we’ll manage.

Sustained winds were higher during Ike, but wind gusts in Beryl came up to basically match some of those sustained winds.

Hurricane Ike sustained winds in 2008 ranged from 60 to 90 mph, much higher than in Beryl though wind gusts did get to those levels as well. (NOAA)

Here we are comparing a category 1 relatively compact hurricane to a category 2 unwieldy, large hurricane.

Why did Beryl match Ike’s scope of power outages despite being a weaker storm? First, the track put Houston on the stronger side, so most of the metro area saw the eyewall of Beryl and the strongest winds. Second, and this is where our expectations probably failed us most: Ike was weakening on approach to Texas. Beryl was entering rapid intensification. Beryl was only slightly weaker when it arrived in Houston as it was on the coast. Ike was about 110 mph at landfall and 95 mph once in Houston. Beryl was 80 mph at landfall and 75 mph once in Houston.

It barely weakened. Why? I think there are two reasons. First, Beryl while undergoing rapid intensification up to landfall took some time to unwind. There is absolutely a difference between a hurricane ramping up at landfall and one that is already decelerating. My new philosophy on this will be to add a category of wind impacts to a storm that is intensifying up to landfall. Second, Beryl was traveling over an area that had seen about 200 to 400 percent of normal rainfall over the prior week.

Percent of normal rainfall between June 30th and July 7th, right before Beryl arrived. (NOAA)

For Houston and points south, basically right on Beryl’s track, we had very soggy ground. This likely contributed both to Beryl maintaining intensity and the wind damage it caused. Trees fall more easily on saturated ground. Could there be an element of brown ocean effect at play here, where hurricanes can maintain intensity over land? Maybe, but that’s a longer-term research project.

There’s certainly an argument to be made about whether or not the power infrastructure in the Houston area is underprepared for the true threat this region faces. After Katrina hit Miami in 2005, 90 percent of customers had power back within three days. Three days after Beryl, about 58 percent of customers were back online in Houston. I don’t want to use this post to assign blame or recommend what should be done, but given that a category one or stronger storm can hit Texas every other year or so on average, this is probably an area that should be a wake up call. Texas should be attempting to match Florida, which has done great work in the hurricane resiliency space, between power restoration and building codes, despite some occasional hurdles.

Most importantly, I want this post to convey that there is honestly no such thing as “only a category one” hurricane or “only a tropical storm.” While classifying storms is good from a scientific standpoint after the fact, it’s not always great science communication in real-time. This was certainly a wake up call for me, and I hope it will be for others that the only thing that matters in each unique storm is what the impacts will be. And hopefully we can convey them in an understandable way to folks here in Texas and elsewhere as our site grows across the Gulf and Atlantic.