[CSPP Note: Does the absence of GrayÕs position that hurricanes have
nothing to do with man-made global warming indicate a subtle press bias toward
alarmism?]
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070403/ap_on_re_us/hurricane_forecast_6

By DAN ELLIOTT,
Associated Press Writer Tue Apr 3, 11:13 AM ET
DENVER - The 2007
Atlantic hurricane season should be "very active," with nine
hurricanes and a good chance that at least one major hurricane will hit the
U.S. coast, a top researcher said Tuesday.
Forecaster William Gray
said he expects 17 named storms in all this year, five of them major hurricanes
with sustained winds of 111 mph or greater. The probability of a major
hurricane making landfall on the U.S. coast this year: 74 percent, compared
with the average of 52 percent over the past century, he said.
Last year, Gray's
forecast and government forecasts were higher than what the Atlantic hurricane
season produced.
There
were 10 named Atlantic storms in 2006 and five hurricanes, two of them major,
in what was considered a "near normal" season. None of those
hurricanes hit the U.S. Atlantic coast — only the 11th time that has
occurred since 1945. The National Hurricane
Center in Miami originally reported nine storms, but upgraded one
storm after a postseason review.
Gray's research team at
Colorado State University said an unexpected late El Nino contributed to the
calmer season last year. El Nino — a warming in the Pacific Ocean —
has far-reaching effects that include changing wind patterns in the eastern
Atlantic, which can disrupt the formation of hurricanes there.
A weak to moderate El
Nino occurred in December and January but dissipated rapidly, said Phil
Klotzbach, a member of Gray's team.
"Conditions this
year are likely to be more conducive to hurricanes," Klotzbach said
Tuesday. In the absence of El Nino, "winds aren't tearing the storm
systems apart."
The team's forecasts are
based on global oceanic and atmospheric conditions.
Klotzbach advised coastal
residents along the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico to have hurricane plans and
preparedness kits in place, but he added, "You can't let the possibility
of a hurricane coming ruin your summer."
The Atlantic hurricane
season, which runs from June 1 to Nov. 30, averages 9.6 named storms, 5.9
hurricanes and 2.3 intense hurricanes per year.
The devastating 2005
season set a record with 28 named storms, 15 of them hurricanes. Four of those
hurricanes hit the U.S. coast, the worst among them Katrina, which devastated
New Orleans and leveled parts of the Gulf Coast region.
Gray has spent more than
40 years in tropical weather research. He heads the Tropical Meteorology
Project at Colorado State.
Federal government
forecasters plan to release their prediction in late May.