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Tropical 2020 Atlantic Hurricane Season Discussion

I also plotted deep-layer wind shear anomalies using the ERA-5, and they're quite alarming. 4th lowest June-July wind shear on record in the Atlantic Main Development Region and the wind shear in the eastern Atlantic is at record lows.

Going to be a very nasty Cape Verde hurricane season with lots of long-lived TCs

Shear_percentiles_2020_crop.png

ERA5_shear_anomalies_1979_2020.jpg
 
I also plotted deep-layer wind shear anomalies using the ERA-5, and they're quite alarming. 4th lowest June-July wind shear on record in the Atlantic Main Development Region and the wind shear in the eastern Atlantic is at record lows.

Going to be a very nasty Cape Verde hurricane season with lots of long-lived TCs

View attachment 46186

View attachment 46187

Maybe we can break the 200mph barrier this year.


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I saw an article that said 2005 had warmer SSTs but this year looks warmer to me.

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69487a55da8d074132282292532247d3.png



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Looks like models are sniffing out some subtropical low development but no real hurricanes downstream in the members




I looked at the 6z GEFS members hour by hour, and it looks like they all die out around 144hr at 45-50W. You’d think we’d see some red tracks late towards the east coast so I decided to check it out

a649888b1cee5f782409dcc725d9b763.jpg


Some decent shear is present in this region which is definitely not helping in the 8-12 day time period for development and sustainability of a tropical depression

bf42aa92a235aeadc2155154d7b21d4b.jpg


Only one run and only one model, but GEFS is similar but at this lead time the shear is a little smoothed.

We may get lucky for most of August avoiding a large storm considering all the favorable ingredients.
 
I wanna go on record to say the pattern won’t produce any storms for NC landfalls. Any impacts here will be leftovers from the gulf.
 
Looks like models are sniffing out some subtropical low development but no real hurricanes downstream in the members




I looked at the 6z GEFS members hour by hour, and it looks like they all die out around 144hr at 45-50W. You’d think we’d see some red tracks late towards the east coast so I decided to check it out

a649888b1cee5f782409dcc725d9b763.jpg


Some decent shear is present in this region which is definitely not helping in the 8-12 day time period for development and sustainability of a tropical depression

bf42aa92a235aeadc2155154d7b21d4b.jpg


Only one run and only one model, but GEFS is similar but at this lead time the shear is a little smoothed.

We may get lucky for most of August avoiding a large storm considering all the favorable ingredients.


Just heating up the ocean for the main event.


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Another area of interest in the eastern Atlantic.040024F9-A2C9-49EC-A960-83DBE5ABA869.png
1. Showers and thunderstorms located a few hundred miles south of the
Cabo Verde Islands are associated with a westward-moving tropical
wave. Some slow development of this system is possible over the
next few days as it crosses the tropical eastern Atlantic. By the
middle of next week, environmental conditions are expected to
become less favorable for development.

* Formation chance through 48 hours...low...10 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...low...20 percent.
 
Models are suggesting the E Pacific will have much stronger activity than the Atlantic over the next 2 weeks. Let’s see how the period 8/9-22 ends up verifying for the 2 basins. The Atlantic is due a breather to say the least!
 
Models are suggesting the E Pacific will have much stronger activity than the Atlantic over the next 2 weeks. Let’s see how the period 8/9-22 ends up verifying for the 2 basins. The Atlantic is due a breather to say the least!
Sounds like a Nino
 
Sounds like a Nino

No, it really sounds more like 2017. Many prominent figures were cancelling the season in mid-late August as the east Pacific raged, then the Atlantic ended up having one of the most active Septembers on record. This year may not be that active in September, but the environment could actually support as much, if not more activity this time around.
 
Needa watch these MCVs for development once they interact with warm water, especially that one off the SC coast A947B37B-F274-4A6B-A8D6-948D1D645844.png
 
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Code Orange in the Atlantic. EEDA916B-4AED-43FD-B80B-44AE9BBF5EB1.png

Showers and thunderstorms associated with a tropical wave located a
few hundred miles south-southwest of the Cabo Verde Islands
continue to show signs of organization. However, satellite-derived
wind data from earlier this morning indicated that the circulation
remains elongated. Environmental conditions appear conducive
enough to support additional development of this system, and a
tropical depression could form during the next few days while it
moves generally westward at 15 mph across the tropical Atlantic.
Conditions are likely to become less conducive for development late
this week.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...medium...40 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...medium...50 percent.
 
Hmmm....the lead feature appears to be giving it some cover.....like its sitting in a trough.....

ScreenshotCapture_2020_08_10_21_22_46_534.jpg
 
Although if it can get strong it can fight it off. In any case the trough moving in later will take it ots.


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Are you sure about a OTS solution?
 
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