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T&T: Initial Hurricane Outlook for '07

From: GARY RITZMAN (no email)
Date: Mon Apr 02 2007 - 21:31:49 EDT

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    More at Accuweather.com There is no indication that any of this information is
    copywrited.
    Initial Hurricane Outlook<>

    Updated: Thursday, March 29, 2007 10:16 AM

    Hurricane<http://headlines.accuweather.com/news-story.asp?partner=accuweather
    &traveler=0&article=6##> Threat Looms for U.S. Energy Production and Gulf
    Coast in 2007

    AccuWeather.com's Bastardi: "Last Year Was Just a Breather"

    STATE COLLEGE, PA, March 27, 2007 - AccuWeather.com Hurricane Center Chief
    Forecaster Joe Bastardi warns that the U.S. Gulf Coast, which avoided the
    wrath of major storms and
    hurricanes<http://headlines.accuweather.com/news-story.asp?partner=accuweathe
    r&traveler=0&article=6##> in 2006, is at much higher risk of destructive
    tropical weather this year. This could have significant implications for the
    areas recovering from the devastation wrought by the hurricanes of 2004 and
    2005 - which included Katrina - as well as for energy prices, because of the
    significant energy production that occurs in the Gulf of Mexico.

    Bastardi, who in March of last year correctly forecasted that the region would
    get "minimal" attention by that season's hurricanes, said that this year, "the
    Gulf and Florida face a renewed threat, and we will see more powerful storms
    across the board. We will not get anywhere near the amount of storms that we
    did in 2005, but it is the intensity of the storms we do get that will be of
    major concern."

    "We'll see storms on the prowl in the Gulf again. The entire region -
    including New Orleans and other areas that are still rebuilding after Katrina
    - is susceptible to landfalling storms. Of concern to consumers everywhere is
    that there is so much oil and natural gas drilling and refining occurring in
    the Gulf. This year's stronger storms are likely to cause the kind of
    disruption that will be felt in wallets and pocketbooks."

    As for the Northeast, Bastardi's 2006 forecast still holds: the region is
    likely be the target of storm strikes over the next 10 years. "Last year the
    Northeast may have dodged a bullet, but unfortunately you can only be lucky
    for so long. We are in a pattern similar to that of the late 1930s through the
    1940s, when the Northeast was hit by two major storms."

    Last year, Bastardi forecast that the East Coast would be far more likely than
    the eastern and central Gulf to see hurricane activity, and indeed, most of
    2006's storms tracked farther east than in 2005 - including Ernesto, which
    caused a half-billion dollars in damages in the region from North Carolina to
    New Jersey.

    Asked about the diminished number of tropical
    cyclones<http://headlines.accuweather.com/news-story.asp?partner=accuweather&
    traveler=0&article=6##> compared to 2005, AccuWeather.com Director of Forecast
    Operations Ken Reeves said, "Keep in mind that in 1992, a year with very few
    storms, we saw one of the most destructive in recorded history - Hurricane
    Andrew. This year is shaping up to be one that features some potentially very
    powerful storms, so whether or not the quantity is there, the danger certainly
    is."

    The development of an El Nino last year has been frequently cited as a reason
    that the 2006 hurricane
    season<http://headlines.accuweather.com/news-story.asp?partner=accuweather&tr
    aveler=0&article=6##> resulted in few landfalling storms, and the development
    of a La Nina this year is already causing some forecasters to project a
    higher-than-average number of tropical cyclones in 2007. Bastardi and Reeves
    believe that the El Nino/La Nina connection is given too much emphasis when
    these events are weak.

    "Last year's season wasn't truncated because of an El
    Nino<http://headlines.accuweather.com/news-story.asp?partner=accuweather&trav
    eler=0&article=6##>," said Reeves. "After all, there was a much stronger El
    Nino in effect in 2004, and that was a significantly more active hurricane
    season than last year. Similarly, a La Nina won't be the main driver of this
    year's hurricane season." Among many factors that came into play, last year's
    storms were weakened by drier-than-normal air and higher-than-normal levels of
    dust in the atmosphere over the Atlantic.

    Bastardi instead points to the pattern of Atlantic Ocean water temperatures as
    a leading factor in determining the power of a hurricane season, as well as
    the overall cyclical trend of more extreme weather across the U.S.
    Specifically, he points to the recent hot, dry summers in the West and Plains
    as a precursor to increased Atlantic Basin hurricane intensity, one of the
    patterns identified by his comparative research of previous seasons.

    "We are living in a time of climatic hardship," said Bastardi. "We're in a
    cycle where weather extremes are more the norm and not the exception. One of
    the ways this manifests itself is in the intensity of hurricanes and tropical
    storms. Last year was just a breather, because the overall pattern shows no
    sign of reversing in the near term."

    The full AccuWeather.com hurricane season forecast will be available in early
    May, released in conjunction with the Second Annual AccuWeather Hurricane
    Summit in Houston, Texas.
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