"Very Active" Hurricane Season Predicted
Top Forecaster Expects 17 Named Storms, Including 5 Major Hurricanes
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Play CBS Video Video Hurricane Season Warning Experts forecast an active hurricane season. As Jennifer Miller reports, forecarsters predict there's a good chance a major hurricane will make landfall.
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Video A Look At The Hurricane Season A top hurricane expert is predicting a busy Atlantic storm season. He says we can expect 17 "named" storms this year. Mark Strassmann reports.
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(AP)
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Interactive Storm Season Track the latest storms, see how they form, get preparation tips and more.
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Section Eye On The Storm Check out our special section to recap past hurricane seasons and prepare for the next.
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Special Report Gulf Coast Disaster Complete coverage of the effects of Hurricane Katrina on the Gulf Coast, including anniversary coverage.
Forecaster William Gray of Colorado State University said he expects 17 named storms in all this year, five of them major hurricanes with sustained winds of 111 mph or greater. The probability of a major hurricane making landfall on the U.S. coast this year is 74 percent, he said.
"There's about a 74 percent chance of a major storm hitting the U.S. coast this year, when the long-term average is about 52" percent, Dr. William Gray, Colorado State University forecaster, told CBS News Radio.
Last year, Gray's forecast and government forecasts were higher than what the Atlantic hurricane season produced. He expected five major hurricanes, but there were only two. And none hit the U.S., CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann reports.
"We're not perfect. Nobody is. We over-forecast last year, as did everybody else," Gray tells Strassmann.
There were 10 named Atlantic storms in 2006 and five hurricanes, two of them major, in what was considered a "near normal" season. None of those hurricanes hit the U.S. Atlantic coast — only the 11th time that has occurred since 1945. The National Hurricane Center in Miami originally reported nine storms, but upgraded one storm after a postseason review.
Gray's research team at Colorado State University said an unexpected late El Nino contributed to the calmer season last year. El Nino — a warming in the Pacific Ocean — has far-reaching effects that include changing wind patterns in the eastern Atlantic, which can disrupt the formation of hurricanes there.
A weak-to-moderate El Nino occurred in December and January but dissipated rapidly, said Phil Klotzbach, a member of Gray's team.
"Conditions this year are likely to be more conducive to hurricanes," Klotzbach said Tuesday. In the absence of El Nino, "winds aren't tearing the storm systems apart."
"If you don't get La Nina right, you don't get the forecast right," CBS News hurricane consultant Brian Norcross says.
Gray and his research team study the interplay between atmospheric winds developing in the Pacific, and ocean water temperatures in the Atlantic and Caribbean, Strassmann reports.
Klotzbach advised coastal residents along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts to have hurricane plans and preparedness kits in place, but he added, "You can't let the possibility of a hurricane coming ruin your summer."
The Atlantic hurricane season, which runs from June 1 to Nov. 30, averages 9.6 named storms, 5.9 hurricanes and 2.3 intense hurricanes per year.
The 2007 season is not expected to be as bad as the 2005 season, which is now infamous for producing Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. That season saw at least 27 named storms — seven of which were considered intense hurricanes, CBS News' Jennifer Miller reports. The worst of the 2005 storms was Katrina, which devastated New Orleans and leveled parts of the Gulf Coast region.
Gray has spent more than 40 years in tropical weather research. He heads the Tropical Meteorology Project at Colorado State.
Gray's predication comes amidst much attention on global warming and how it could affect weather around the globe. But Gray disagrees with those who blame hurricane activity on human-induced global warming, Miller reports.
"I don't think people should read too much into all the hype on
global warming and CO2," he said. "We think these are well within the natural range."
Federal government forecasters plan to release their prediction in late May.
© MMVII, CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 33 CommentsNo one knows for sure yet, and scientists are simply investigating. Mostly without politics.
"I don't think people should read too much into all the hype on global warming and CO2," he said. "We think these are well within the natural range."
Regarding the hurricane activity, nothing else.
If you still want to disbelieve, note the term "human-induced global warming." He doesn't say the planet isn't getting warmer, just that it isn't unnatural. I'm still undecided on whether humans are contributing to GW or not. What I AM sure of is that humans have thrown the biosphere out of balance and there will be consequences. GW may or may not be one of them...the others will likely manifest in totally unpredicted and unexpected ways like the mysterious bee deaths going on in 24 states.
Posted by vbnvbn at 10:40 PM : Apr 03, 2007
No, no, he invented the Internet. And he's watching you right now....
My point being that if they can spin their image, they can "rewright history" to blame the current administration for the ending of the ice age.
I wonder if the people in new orleans will listen this time whey they are told to evacuate the damm city. Get on your peddle bike if needed just get the f-out.
Or here's a clue, don't live their in the first place. As with the idiots on the fault line in california.
Posted by xfredmenzies at 03:43 PM : Apr 03, 2007
I concur. Every fricking year they are wrong. Scare mongers is what I call them.
Human-caused Global Warming has not been proven, there's just a supposed consensus. Science isn't supposed to be about consensus, sciense is supposed to be about proving theories.
So Human-caused Global Warming is a religion, a belief in something that hasn't been proven.
It has a High-Priest: Algore.
It has sins: Driving an SUV and not changing to the correct light bulbs.
It has pennance: Buying so-called Carbon Credits.
It has attonement: Planting a tree or buying a Prius.
It has devils: Republicans and anyone who doesn't accept the dogma.
It has evangelists: The Media.
It preaches the end of the World.
It preaches salvation, found in Government, Higher Taxes, and more Government Regulation.
I could go on, but I think you get the point.
...
Anyone who dissagrees with The Consensus is a heretic, owned by Big Oil, not a "real" scientist, or a right-wing religious flat-earther.
You're the one bringing up his motivations, thus proving my point.
How's that for ignorantly simplifying the issue?
I pray all that all of those that have been displaced by a hurricane never have to go through that terrible event again in their lifetime.
And I wish that everyone that turns this into "something political," such as they have in these comments, realise the torment a hurricane hit can be.
Ahhh, I knew it would only be a matter of time before this "Dr." Gray person was pilloried by the Leftists for daring to speak against the Church of Global Warming.
Thank you, all you Global Warming Sheep for revealing the truth about this Gray heretic!
I knew he couldn't be legit if he dissagreed with the Concensus.
He should join the Bush administration if I may call it that................. laughingly.
Instead of paying attention to these publicity seekers, one should spend their time more productively reading their horoscope.
Shouldn't this "Dr." Gray, if he really is a doctor, shouldn't he be punished, or defrocked, or something for calling Global Warming and CO2 'hype'?
He can't be allowed to get away with this blasphemy against the Church of Global Warming!!
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