The 2025 hurricane season is shaping up to be one of the most intense in recent years, with forecasters at Colorado State University predicting an above-normal active season. A staggering 17 named storms are expected,
Colorado State University, a school renowned for its hurricane research, said it expects “above-normal” tropical activity this year. The early-season prediction, released Thursday, stems from warm sea-surface temperatures, and the potential for conditions that kindle tropical activity.
After an extremely active and deadly 2024 Atlantic hurricane season, the World Meteorological Organization is retiring the names of three particularly devastating storms that broke records and made history: Beryl, Helene and Milton.
The official start of hurricane season is less than 60 days away. The ‘A’-named storm will be here before you know it! (Spoiler alert: it’s Andrea.)
Last year featured back-to-back catastrophic impacts from Hurricanes Helene and Milton. The upcoming season could be just as active.
Leading hurricane researchers have a sobering outlook for the upcoming Atlantic hurricane season that could see the fury of storms exceeding typical levels.
On Thursday, the pioneers of seasonal hurricane forecasts released their first predictions of what the upcoming Atlantic hurricane season could hold.
The research team at Colorado State University released an initial Atlantic hurricane forecast for 2025 on Tuesday. Here's a breakdown.