CBS/AP/ June 26, 2010, 7:46 AM

Experts Predict Active Hurricane Season

Government forecasters warned of a busier-than-normal hurricane season Tuesday.

National Weather Service forecasters said they expect 13 to 17 tropical storms, with seven to 10 of them becoming hurricanes. CBS News reports they also believe that three to five of the storms will be Category 3 or higher.

An average Atlantic hurricane season brings 11 named tropical storms, six of which become hurricanes, including two major ones, NOAA said.

The forecast follows that of two other leading storm experts in anticipating a busy season.

The likelihood of above-normal hurricane activity is 75 percent, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said.

"With expectations for an active season, it is critically important that people who live in East and Gulf coastal areas as well as the Caribbean be prepared," said Bill Proenza, director of NOAA's National Hurricane Center in Miami.

"Now is the time to update your hurricane plan, not when the storm is bearing down on you," Proenza said.

Like a scar on an old wound, waterlines still mark homes across New Orleans and serve as a reminder of what happens when hurricanes hit and levees fail, reports CBS News correspondent Hari Sreenivasan. Hurricane-driven walls of water breached the city's protection system and devastated nearly 80 percent of New Orleans.

Now, 10 days away from the start of another hurricane season, Col. Richard Wagenaar doesn't mince words when he says the job patching the problem is still not complete.

"If Katrina came today, there would be significant risk to this metropolitan area," Wagenaar tells Sreenivasan.

Still, there has been progress. Since Katrina, the Army Corps of Engineers has worked around the clock to repair and restore 220 miles of levees at a price tag of approximately $2 billion. But the Corps admits that it may be 2011 before completion.

After the battering by storms Katrina and Rita in 2005 there were widespread fears last summer of another powerful storm striking, but the unexpected development of the El Nino climate phenomenon helped dampen conditions.

The El Nino has ended, however, leaving the potential for more tropical storms threatening the Gulf and East coasts.

El Nino is a warming of the tropical Pacific Ocean that occurs every few years. The warm water affects wind patterns that guide weather movement and its effects can be seen worldwide. In El Nino years, there tend to be fewer summer hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean.

The prediction for greater storm activity in the Atlantic is flipped on the other side of the country: Forecasters are predicting the Pacific hurricane season will likely be below average, with 12-to-16 tropical storms (the average is 15-16), with 6-to-9 becoming hurricanes (the average is 9), including 2-to-4 major hurricanes (instead of 4-to-5).

Earlier this month Philip Klotzbach, a research associate at Colorado State University, and Joe Bastardi, the chief hurricane forecaster for AccuWeather Inc., said they anticipate a more active storm cycle this year.

And, almost as if to underscore their comments, a subtropical storm formed off the southeast coast and became Andrea, the first named storm of the year, well before the June 1 official beginning of hurricane season.

Hurricane season ends Nov. 30, but the strange season of 2005 ran over into late December, as well as using up all the planned alphabetical names, forcing storm watchers to switch to the Greek alphabet to continue naming storms.

Last year, there were just 10 named storms in the Atlantic, and none made landfall in the United States.

Klotzbach and his colleague at Colorado State, William Gray, predict a "very active" season this year with 17 named storms, including nine hurricanes.

Bastardi called for fewer storms but agreed 2007 would be more active than usual. He expects 13 or 14 named storms, six or seven of which will strike the U.S. coast.

Bastardi said the Texas Gulf coast is twice as likely to be hit as in an average year and Florida appears four times as likely.

Katrina easily became the costliest hurricane in U.S. history with damage estimated by the National Hurricane Center at more than $80 billion. Indeed, of the 30 costliest hurricanes in this country's history, four occurred in 2005.

Katrina displaced 1992's Andrew, at more than $48 billion, as the top storm, while other 2005 storms ranked are Wilma, No. 3, at $21 billion; Rita in 9th place with damage of nearly $12 billion and, ranked 30th, Dennis at $2 billion.

With a death toll topping 1,500, Katrina is also the third-deadliest in U.S. history, following the 1900 hurricane that hit Galveston, Texas, killing 8,000 to 12,000 people, and a 1928 storm that claimed at least 2,500 lives in Florida.
© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
29 Comments Add a Comment
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says:
This team has been 50% or more off - high or low - over the past 16 years.

Like one of Baltimore's TV weathermen recently said, "Anything beyond a five day forecast, to be honest with you, is mostly just a gimmick."

I'll bet he was told not to repeat it!
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one_american says:
"Experts Predict Active Hurricane Season"

Wow. Deja-vu all over again. ;)
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scottyusa says:
These guys predicted the same thing last year and the exact opposite happened. No storms. I sure hope the building industry doesn't raise their prices "in anticipation" of big storms like the oil companies do. We never seem to get a refund after the prices rise because Iran's president said something more stupid than he normally does and then nothing happens. Insurance companies are no better. In Connecticat as an example the insurance on properties next to the shoreline just skyrocketed. We haven't had a really devastating hurricane here in over 10 years maybe more. Only 1 or 2 in history have been devastating.
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luvny-2009 says:
There's an old saying: "The weatherman makes the forecast, but God makes the weather." I think that's more what luvNY was referring to, and not finding "humor" in the Katrina disaster.

Posted by vbnvbn at 12:37 PM : May 22, 2007

Thanks that's exactly what I meant.

thanks I almost forgot how funny katrina was you (&^$%$%$&*%$(&^%*^)$.
Posted by itwasntme000 at 09:33 AM : May 22, 2007

You are a stupid MORON to even think that!
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mike71067 says:
Yep. Last year the "experts" were predicting a disasterous hurricane season. We all know what happened - or more correctly, what didn't happen.
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jdubs63 says:
I am already paying $4.28 a gal for gas.... should I expect that to double?
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lochlan-2009 says:
Keep an eye on the HAARP project.
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gramto7 says:
I cannot understand some of you people and how you think (or don't think!) Gas prices will go up whether we have sunny skies all year or storms from now until the end of time, billions of years from now. As long as big oil is allowed to do what they want, they will continue to put the screws to us.

As far as the past hurricane season, did you not read about the El Nino that cut down on the hurricanes? That is a known effect of El Nino. Try learning something about your planet before your spout off about the people who work in the hurricane centers.
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lochlan-2009 says:
How many excuse articles are they going to write for big oil. The whole point of this article is to prepare the American citizen for a good reaming. If we get a huricane anywhere even close to our refineries, the hurricane excuse will fly across every media headline as the rates rise through the ceiling on oil. If no hurricane, than all the sheeple can relax a little, happy with the mild reaming and not the $4/gallon reaming they keep trying to tell us we should/could expect. Either way, it's we warned you, or look how bad it could have been (as every polidicktion claims responsibility for keeping gas prices dwon from what they could have been.

Think of it like the email sent around where the kid says she's preganant etc. blah blah blah, and then at the end says, "it's all not true, but see how bad it could be. My report card is on the table."
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padrigo17us says:
My predition is gas prices will continue to go up and if a hurrican does hit and hits the south oil/gas locations we will all be paying $4- $5 dollars a gallon for gas.
Posted by adventurepa at 11:45 AM : May 22, 2007
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That is no prediction-that is ecxactly what will happen. No wait-it will happen even if we don't have a hurricane.
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