Over the past 24 hours, the National Hurricane Center and NOAA have issued several critical updates on ongoing and developing tropical systems in the Atlantic and Eastern Pacific basins. According to the latest advisories, the Atlantic basin remains active, with Hurricane Beryl having intensified into a Category 3 storm as of early Thursday. The system was located approximately 600 miles east of the Lesser Antilles and is moving west-northwest at 14 mph. NOAA reports sustained winds approaching 120...
Over the past 24 hours, the National Hurricane Center and NOAA have issued several critical updates on ongoing and developing tropical systems in the Atlantic and Eastern Pacific basins. According to the latest advisories, the Atlantic basin remains active, with Hurricane Beryl having intensified into a Category 3 storm as of early Thursday. The system was located approximately 600 miles east of the Lesser Antilles and is moving west-northwest at 14 mph. NOAA reports sustained winds approaching 120 mph, making Beryl a major hurricane with the potential to significantly affect the eastern Caribbean islands in the coming days.
The governments of Barbados, St. Lucia, and Martinique have already issued hurricane warnings, and the National Hurricane Center cautions that the storm could bring dangerous storm surges, heavy rainfall, and potentially life-threatening winds to the Windward Islands by late Friday. Communities in coastal and low-lying areas have been urged to complete preparations by Thursday night, with emergency response teams already activated across several island nations.
Meanwhile, in the Eastern Pacific, Tropical Storm Carlotta has weakened overnight to a tropical depression. The system is currently located several hundred miles offshore south of the Baja California peninsula and is expected to dissipate over open waters without making landfall. However, the outer rain bands could bring increased swells and rip currents to parts of southern Mexico, prompting localized weather advisories from Mexican authorities.
Elsewhere, NOAA is also monitoring a tropical wave several hundred miles west of the Cabo Verde Islands. While development remains minimal in the short term, environmental conditions are expected to become more favorable this weekend. The National Hurricane Center assigns a 20 percent chance of cyclone formation over the next five days, suggesting a potential uptick in Atlantic activity as we approach the peak of the season in early September.
Forecasters continue to warn that conditions across the Gulf of Mexico and the southeastern U.S. coast remain conducive for rapid storm development. The Climate Prediction Center has reiterated that sea surface temperatures across key storm breeding regions remain higher than average, a factor that may contribute to increased storm intensity.
Looking ahead, all eyes will remain on Hurricane Beryl as it approaches the Caribbean. Emergency managers across Florida and the Gulf Coast are also closely watching long-range models suggesting possible development near the Yucatan Peninsula late next week. NOAA will provide its next major update by 8 AM EDT Friday, with hurricane reconnaissance flights scheduled to collect more data throughout the day.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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