Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 2 days ago
Meteorologists from the federal government are raising concerns over a possible catastrophic late-season hurricane that could impact seven states along the Gulf Coast this summer, despite the 2026 hurricane season starting off quietly. The seasonal forecast from NOAA highlights that the current shift from La Niña to El Niño is limiting early storm development in the Atlantic, but it may lead to a hazardous increase in activity in the Gulf of Mexico starting in August. Experts caution that warm waters in the Gulf, diminished wind shear, and exceptionally humid atmospheric conditions could work together to rapidly strengthen any storm aiming for Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, or Florida. The National Hurricane Center of NOAA is advising locals to complete their evacuation strategies immediately.

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00the twenty twenty six hurricane season started quiet but federal scientists say that could be the most dangerous thing about
00:07it no a a is now warning that seven gulf coast states may be in the path of a rapidly
00:13intensifying monster storm as the season progresses
00:17the ongoing shift from la nina to el nino is suppressing early atlantic storm activity but forecasters warn the gulf
00:24of mexico itself is running dangerously warm
00:27that warmth combined with reduced wind shear and high atmospheric moisture creates the perfect conditions for a storm to go
00:36from tropical depression to category four in under 48 hours
00:40texas louisiana mississippi alabama florida georgia and south carolina are all in the projected risk zone no a a's national
00:49hurricane center says residents should not be lulled into complacency by the quiet start
00:54the worst may still be coming
Comments

Recommended