After one more system failed turn into a tropical depression or storm over weekends in bay of Mexico, National Hurricane Center studies new system with development potential in Atlantic Ocean.
As of tropical view of NHC at 14:00, tropical wave located just west of the islands of Cape Verde produce unorganized downpours and thunderstorms like this moves west into the tropical Atlantic.
“Environmental conditions may support some kind of slow development of this is system as long as it moves west to west-northwest at about 15 miles per hour across the eastern and central tropical Atlantic for in next a few days,” the forecast says.
NHC gives system twenty% chance turn into depression or next named tropical storm in in next five days.
The season was quiet for most of the unnamed system in seven weeks. NHC tracked Potential Tropical cyclone four with a chance it may have developed into Tropical Storm Daniel as it headed for the coast near south Texas. on Saturday, but system moved inland without reaching full tropical features.
system brought rain as he moved inland south of US-Texas border, but what NHC forecasters warned could become a tropical storm is over up falling apart as it neared the shore.
“What happened to PTC4? There are many factors that explain why perturbations disappear. out”, the National Weather Service said in a statement. “According to the NHC, main reason there was too strong north shift. That means the wind was too strong for PTC4 to overcome and in the end it disappeared and didn’t end up amplification according to the plan.
2022 hurricane season runs from June 1 to Nov. 30, but only three tropical storms have formed so far. Despite the low rates so far, more potential systems likely to form during what is now known as the peak of hurricane season that runs mid-August to mid-October.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration recently confirmed that it expects this season to continue to be an above-average hurricane season, with 14 to 21 named storms expected. Average year calls for 14 named storms.
This follows from record 30 named storms of 2020 and third highest ever with 21 systems in 2021.

