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A wind-whipped storm tore through Northern California on Wednesday, knocking down trees, snarling highways and transit, and leaving tens of thousands of people without power. Days’ worth of rain fell on some places in just a few hours. It was the season’s first major atmospheric river, a type of storm that can deliver prodigious amounts of water in a narrow band from the Pacific Ocean. “This is a major storm the likes of which we haven’t seen in over a decade,” said Melanie Coon, a spokeswoman for Puget Sound Energy. Wind gusts in some places exceeded 90 miles per hour — equivalent to the winds of a hurricane.
Persons: , Melanie Coon Organizations: Puget Sound Energy Locations: Northern California, Pacific, Seattle, California, Oregon, San Francisco
Tracking Hurricane Rafael
  + stars: | 2024-11-04 | by ( William B. Davis | Madison Dong | Judson Jones | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Tracking Hurricane Rafael Leer en españolRafael was a Category 2 hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico Wednesday evening Eastern time, the National Hurricane Center said in its latest advisory. The hurricane had sustained wind speeds of 105 miles per hour. By The New York TimesRafael is the 17th named storm to form in the Atlantic in 2024. In late May, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted that there would be 17 to 25 named storms this year, an above-normal amount. Without El Niño this year, clouds are more likely to tower to the tall heights needed to sustain a powerful cyclone.
Persons: Leer, Rafael, The New York Times Rafael Organizations: National Hurricane Center, The New York Times, NOAA, National Oceanic, Atmospheric Administration, Hurricanes Locations: Gulf, Mexico, United States
Tracking Tropical Storm Oscar
  + stars: | 2024-10-19 | by ( William B. Davis | Madison Dong | Judson Jones | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Tracking Tropical Storm Oscar Leer en españolOscar was a tropical storm in the North Atlantic Ocean Monday evening Eastern time, the National Hurricane Center said in its latest advisory. The tropical storm had sustained wind speeds of 40 miles per hour. By The New York TimesOscar is the 15th named storm to form in the Atlantic in 2024. In late May, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted that there would be 17 to 25 named storms this year, an above-normal amount. Without El Niño this year, clouds are more likely to tower to the tall heights needed to sustain a powerful cyclone.
Persons: Oscar Leer, Oscar, The New York Times Oscar Organizations: National Hurricane Center, The New York Times, NOAA, National Oceanic, Atmospheric Administration, Hurricanes Locations: United States
Tracking Hurricane Milton’s Storm Surge Risk Across FloridaAs Hurricane Milton approaches landfall in Florida this week, the National Hurricane Center is releasing a series of data sets to help warn the public of the risks. Storm surge is one of the deadliest aspects of a strong hurricane as it approaches land. Depending on exactly where Milton makes landfall, storm surge will broadly fluctuate. The Florida Keys are forecast to experience strong winds and storm surge mostly below six feet. Wherever Milton makes landfall, storm surge will come ashore, especially just ahead and south of the storm’s center, similar again to what occurred during Ian.
Persons: Milton, Hurricane Helene, Milton ., Hurricane Ian, Robert Weisberg, , Weisberg, Ian, Organizations: Hurricane, National Hurricane, University of South Locations: Florida, Milton, Tampa, Fort Myers, Naples, Tampa Bay ., Tampa Bay, University of South Florida, Clearwater
Tracking Tropical Storm Helene
  + stars: | 2024-09-24 | by ( Matthew Bloch | William B. Davis | Madison Dong | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +3 min
Tracking Tropical Storm Helene Leer en españolHelene was a tropical storm in the Caribbean Sea early Wednesday Eastern time, the National Hurricane Center said in its latest advisory. The tropical storm had sustained wind speeds of 60 miles per hour. By The New York TimesHelene is the eighth named storm to form in the Atlantic in 2024. In late May, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted that there would be 17 to 25 named storms this year, an above-normal amount. Without El Niño this year, clouds are more likely to tower to the tall heights needed to sustain a powerful cyclone.
Persons: Helene Leer, Helene, The New York Times Helene Organizations: National Hurricane Center, The New York Times, NOAA, National Oceanic, Atmospheric Administration, Hurricanes Locations: Caribbean, Fla, Fort Myers, St . Petersburg, United States
The next storm that could threaten the United States was beginning to take shape Monday afternoon among a swirl of thunderstorms off the shores of Honduras in the western Caribbean Sea, with forecasters saying there is a strong likelihood that it becomes Helene, the next name in the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season storm list. Many of the forecast models that meteorologists use show the storm strengthening rapidly over the next few days before hitting somewhere along the central to eastern Gulf of Mexico coastline Thursday. This storm follows Francine, which spun across the western Gulf of Mexico this month. That storm struggled to organize and only slowly intensified into a weak Category 2 in the final few hours before making landfall in Louisiana and dropping a deluge of rainfall across New Orleans. If this storm system forms more quickly into a named storm across the Caribbean, it is more likely to become a hurricane or even a major hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico before it hits land.
Persons: Helene, Francine Organizations: National Hurricane Center, Nine Locations: United States, Honduras, Gulf of Mexico, Gulf, Mexico, Louisiana, New Orleans
Tracking Hurricane John
  + stars: | 2024-09-23 | by ( Matthew Bloch | William B. Davis | Madison Dong | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Tracking Hurricane John Leer en españolJohn was a Category 3 hurricane over Mexico Monday evening Mexico Central Time, the National Hurricane Center said in its latest advisory. The hurricane had sustained wind speeds of 120 miles per hour. Storms that form in the Atlantic or the Pacific generally move west, meaning Atlantic storms pose a greater threat to North America. Occasionally, a storm can move farther north, as Hurricane Hilary did last year, bringing damaging winds and intense rain to Southern California. Hurricane season in the Eastern Pacific began on May 15, two weeks before the Atlantic season started.
Persons: Leer, español John, The New York Times John, Hilary, Niña Organizations: Mexico Monday, National Hurricane Center, The New York Times, NOAA, Southern California ., Eastern Pacific Locations: español, Mexico, Eastern, North America, Baja California, Southern California, Southern California . Hurricane
Tropical Storm Debby, which came ashore as a category 1 hurricane along the Florida coast early Monday, will move across the Southeast on Tuesday at roughly the speed of a human walking. Like Debby, both storms stalled over the region and became reminders that a hurricane’s hazards can persist and intensify for days after it makes landfall. Even small changes in the steering currents could result in Debby shifting and changing where the rain falls. The storm will most likely move slightly offshore, allowing some restrengthening before the storm turns north and moves back inland. Debby will funnel huge amounts of moisture northward and collide with cooler air moving into the region, allowing storms to form.
Persons: Debby, Alex Lamers, Hurricane Harvey, , Erica, William B, Alberto, Zack Taylor Organizations: Weather Prediction, Houston Metro, Weather, Atmospheric Administration, Iowa State University, Davis Locations: Georgia, South Carolina, Florida, Houston, Hurricane Florence, North Carolina, Savannah, Ga, Charleston, S.C, “ Charleston, Florence, Baltimore, Boston
As Tropical Storm Debby moves inland off the Gulf of Mexico this week, it is expected to bring intense rainfall and flooding across northern Florida, Georgia and South Carolina. The National Weather Service forecast a rare high risk of excessive rain for the region. Widespread flash flooding and river flooding are expected, with 10 to 20 inches of rainfall along the coast. The most intense rainfall is expected to spread over the area Monday night into Tuesday. “We’re going to be into a catastrophic rain situation,” Kevin Guthrie, the executive director of Florida’s Division of Emergency Management, said at a news conference on Sunday.
Persons: “ We’re, Kevin Guthrie Organizations: National Hurricane Center, National Weather Service, Florida’s, Emergency Management Locations: of Mexico, Florida , Georgia, South Carolina
Tracking Hurricane Debby
  + stars: | 2024-08-03 | by ( Matthew Bloch | William B. Davis | Madison Dong | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +3 min
Tracking Hurricane Debby Leer en españolDebby was a Category 1 hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico late Sunday Eastern time, the National Hurricane Center said in its latest advisory. The hurricane had sustained wind speeds of 75 miles per hour. Debby is the fourth named storm to form in the Atlantic in 2024. In late May, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted that there would be 17 to 25 named storms this year, an above-normal amount. Without El Niño this year, clouds are more likely to tower to the tall heights needed to sustain a powerful cyclone.
Persons: Leer, Debby Organizations: Sunday, National Hurricane Center, Fort Myers, Fort Myers Cedar Key, United States, National Oceanic, Atmospheric Administration, Hurricanes Locations: Gulf of Mexico, Fort Myers Cedar, Fort Myers Cedar Key Tampa, United States
Florida prepares for potential damage. With heavy rainfall of up to 12 inches expected over the next seven days, Florida is bracing for the threat of flooding, along with gusty winds and erosion. Just after 11 a.m. on Friday, the National Weather Service issued a tropical storm warning, meaning tropical storm conditions are expected within 36 hours, for the southwest coast of the Florida peninsula, from East Cape Sable to Bonita Beach. Other areas of the southern and western coasts of the peninsula, as well as parts of the Florida Keys, were under a tropical storm watch, forecasters said. The governor’s order covers Orange County and Osceola County, and travel could be disrupted for the throngs of summer visitors who go to Orlando and the theme parks at Universal Studios Florida and Walt Disney World.
Persons: Ron DeSantis Organizations: Florida, National Weather Service, Universal Studios Florida, Walt Disney World Locations: Florida, East, Sable, Bonita Beach, Orange County, Osceola County, Orlando
Sean Waugh holds a laptop with green, red and yellow weather radar looping as his driver rumbles down an Oklahoma highway in their government-issued truck. A rectangular cage with metal mesh covers the truck in an attempt to protect the team from hail. Hanging off the front of the hail cage are weather instruments that look like the horn of a rhinoceros charging into a storm. The truck, called Probe One, points in one direction, and a companion, Probe Two, points in another. “Probe One, you want us to go?”“Yes, go now,” says Dr. Waugh, a researcher with the National Severe Storms Laboratory.
Persons: Sean Waugh, , Waugh, Reed Timmer Locations: Oklahoma
Evenings may not offer much respite. Forecasters with the Weather Prediction Center warned that warm overnight lows in many areas Tuesday into Wednesday will provide little relief. From Tuesday into Wednesday, temperatures across the Northern Plains are expected to regulate back to normal and, even dip slightly below average in some areas. Portions of the Midwest will also be at risk of major-to-extreme heat on Tuesday, but showers and thunderstorms arriving ahead of cooler air could keep temperatures lower on Wednesday. In ensuing days, an air mass of unseasonably cooler air out of Canada will bring progressive relief as it sweeps through the eastern half of the U.S. Those milder temperatures should reach most in the South and along the East Coast by Thursday and Friday.
Organizations: Weather, U.S Locations: Canada, East Coast
On Today’s Episode:For First Time, NATO Accuses China of Supplying Russia’s Attacks on Ukraine, by David E. SangerBiden’s High-Stakes Moment: Tonight’s NATO News Conference, by Michael D. Shear, Katie Rogers, and Michael M. GrynbaumHospitals in Houston ‘Backed Up’ After Hurricane, as Millions in U.S. Swelter, by Isabelle Taft and Judson JonesFrance Is Busing Homeless Immigrants Out of Paris Before the Olympics, by Sarah Hurtes and Ségolène Le Stradic
Persons: David E, Sanger Biden’s, Michael D, Katie Rogers, Michael M, Isabelle Taft, Judson Jones, Sarah Hurtes, Le Stradic Organizations: NATO, Conference, Grynbaum Locations: China, Ukraine, Houston, Judson Jones France, Paris
More than 1.3 million utility customers in the Houston area were still without power on Wednesday, two days after Hurricane Beryl swept destructively through the region. Hot, steamy weather on the heels of the storm left many people in the region to swelter without air conditioning. As many as 144 million people across the United States were under National Weather Service heat advisories on Wednesday, from the West and Pacific Northwest to Southeast Texas and many major cities on the East Coast. Large areas of California, Nevada, Arizona and Utah, and the corridor from Washington, D.C., to New Jersey were under excessive heat warnings, indicating “extremely dangerous heat conditions.” Forecasters expect dangerous conditions to persist in the West for several more days and to redevelop in the Southeast later in the week.
Persons: Hurricane Beryl, destructively Organizations: Hurricane, National Weather Service, West and, Washington , D.C Locations: Houston, United States, West and Pacific Northwest, Southeast Texas, East Coast ., California , Nevada , Arizona, Utah, Washington ,, New Jersey
Tropical Storm Beryl ripped a path of destruction through the heart of Houston on Monday, transforming roads into rivers, killing at least four people and knocking out power for more than two million customers across Texas. The storm, which made landfall early Monday as a Category 1 hurricane, weakened as it passed over the city and continued its swirling march north. But its relatively modest official strength undersold its power, local authorities said. As it churned through Houston, officials warned people to stay inside and away from windows, “as though there was a tornado coming your way,” Lina Hidalgo, the top official in Harris County, which includes Houston, cautioned residents. The center passed just to the west of the city, meaning Houston received some of the worst of the storm as it spun counterclockwise.
Persons: Beryl, ” Lina Hidalgo Organizations: Houston Locations: Houston, Texas, Harris County
According to major forecasts, it looks like it’s going to be an above-average hurricane season. An average Atlantic hurricane season has 14 named storms, including seven hurricanes and three major hurricanes. In 2020, the May forecast was for 13 to 19 named storms, but an updated forecast for August was even higher, with 19 to 25 named storms. This region, from West Africa to Central America, is hotter this year than it was before the start of last year’s hurricane season, which produced 20 named storms. The possibility of a La Niña, combined with record sea surface temperatures this hurricane season, is expected to create a robust environment this year for storms to form and intensify.
Persons: Judson Jones, Rick Spinrad, Idalia, Zack Wittman, Alberto, William, Damon Winter, Brian McNoldy, , Phil Klotzbach, Benjamin Kirtman, Waters, Niño, El, Michelle L’Heureux Organizations: The New York Times, National Oceanic, Atmospheric Administration, NOAA, Hurricane Idalia, National Weather Service, New York Times NOAA, University of Miami, Colorado State University, El Locations: Florida’s Big Bend, America, Fort Myers Beach, Fla, West Africa, Central America, El
According to major forecasts, it looks like it’s going to be an above-average hurricane season. Those could include four to seven major hurricanes — Category 3 or higher — with winds of at least 111 m.p.h. An average Atlantic hurricane season has 14 named storms, including seven hurricanes and three major hurricanes. In 2020, the May forecast was for 13 to 19 named storms, but an updated forecast for August was even higher, with 19 to 25 named storms. This region, from West Africa to Central America, is hotter this year than it was before the start of last year’s hurricane season, which produced 20 named storms.
Persons: Judson Jones, Rick Spinrad, Idalia, Zack Wittman, Alberto, William, Damon Winter, Brian McNoldy, , Phil Klotzbach, Benjamin Kirtman, Waters, Niño, El, Michelle L’Heureux Organizations: The New York Times, National Oceanic, Atmospheric Administration, NOAA, Hurricane Idalia, National Weather Service, New York Times NOAA, University of Miami, Colorado State University, El Locations: Florida’s Big Bend, America, Fort Myers Beach, Fla, West Africa, Central America, El
Hurricane Beryl rapidly intensified from a tropical storm to a Category 4 hurricane in two days as it rushed toward the Caribbean this weekend, increasing its wind speed by 45 miles per hour daily. This quick escalation was a direct result of the above-average sea surface temperatures as well as a harbinger of what is to come this hurricane season. “This early-season storm activity is breaking records that were set in 1933 and 2005, two of the busiest Atlantic hurricane seasons on record,” said Philip Klotzbach, an expert in seasonal hurricane forecasts at Colorado State University. Last fall, a study in the journal Scientific Reports found that Atlantic hurricanes from 2001 to 2020 were twice as likely to grow from a weak storm into a hurricane of Category 3 or higher within 24 hours than they were from 1971 to 1990. The study added to a growing body of evidence that rapidly developing major hurricanes were becoming more likely.
Persons: , Philip Klotzbach Organizations: Colorado State University, Last Locations: Caribbean
The city could see temperatures in the high 90s or above on Saturday. Credit... Hannah Beier for The New York TimesOn the first weekend of summer, a brutal heat wave now entering its sixth day will scorch large swaths of the country. The heat index in New York City is forecast to reach 96 degrees on Saturday and then 99 degrees on Sunday. Already, the city has recorded temperatures it hasn’t seen in almost two years, with Central Park hitting 94 degrees on Friday. Though the heat wave will not fade over the weekend, conditions are expected to cool slightly on Monday.
Persons: Hannah Beier, Graham Dickie Organizations: Philadelphia Zoo, ., The New York Times, Washington , D.C, New York Times, Central Park, National Weather Service, Centers for Disease Control Locations: Midwest, Ohio Valley, Southern Plains, Utah , Nevada, California, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Washington ,, Fort Greene Park, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, Manhattan, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, Fresno, Calif, Wichita, Kan, Tampa, Fla
Tropical Storm Alberto, the first named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, brought intense rain and coastal flooding to parts of Texas and northeastern Mexico on Wednesday, hours before it was expected to make landfall. In Texas, officials warned of flooded roads in the Houston area early Wednesday afternoon. The National Hurricane Center warned that Alberto was a large storm, with tropical-force winds extending about 415 miles north of its center in the Gulf of Mexico as it moved west toward northeastern Mexico. The storm had maximum sustained winds of 40 miles per hour, but the main concern was rainfall of a foot or more that was predicted for parts of Texas and Mexico. Tropical storm warnings were issued for coastal areas on both sides of the border.
Persons: Alberto Organizations: Atlantic, Wednesday, National Hurricane Center Locations: Texas, Mexico, Houston, Galveston, Gulf
A rainstorm off the coast of Mexico became Tropical Storm Alberto on Wednesday, the first named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season. While the storm had maximum sustained winds of 40 miles per hour, the main concern was rainfall of a foot or more predicted for parts of Texas and Mexico. Tropical storm warnings were issued for coastal areas of Texas and northeastern Mexico. The storm was in the Gulf of Mexico on Wednesday and was headed west toward northeastern Mexico, according to the National Hurricane Center. Forecasters predicted Alberto could make landfall early Thursday, most likely in the Mexican state of Tamaulipas, but its effects were expected to extend far beyond that.
Persons: Tropical Storm Alberto, Alberto Organizations: Tropical, Wednesday, Atlantic, National Hurricane Center Locations: Mexico, Texas, Gulf of Mexico, Mexican, Tamaulipas
Steady rain showers were falling for the fourth consecutive day across South Florida on Friday morning, capping a week in which the soggy weather pattern caused major travel disruptions and flooded homes and roadways. The threat of heavy rain was expected to slowly diminish over the next couple of days, according to the National Weather Service, with forecasters still cautioning that lingering showers may cause problems. Renewed areas of flash flooding remained possible into the afternoon across that part of the state. At times through Friday morning, the storms were expected to drop another two to three inches of rain an hour on top of the foot or more of precipitation that had fallen this week. The already saturated and vulnerable soils across the region will certainly be sensitive to any additional rainfall and so, a flood watch remained in effect until Friday evening in several counties.
Organizations: National Weather Service Locations: South Florida
You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load. The East Coast’s First Heat Wave Is on the Way. The abrupt arrival of summer will bring stifling temperatures from Chicago to New York, with little relief overnight. The East Coast’s first heat wave of 2024 arrives next week, and is likely to come as a shock to human bodies that have not adapted to summer swelter.
Organizations: Manhattan, The New York Locations: Chicago, New York
A waterlogged South Florida awoke on Thursday to a warning from forecasters that soaking showers and thunderstorms over parts of the region would raise the risk of flash flooding from late in the morning through the afternoon, following days of heavy rain that have already caused major travel disruptions and flooded roads and homes. Floridians at the southern tip of the peninsula braced for the third consecutive day of tropical downpours, as a line of storms was once again expected to stretch from the west coast to the east coast of the state. Forecasters said there was potential for higher-end rainfall totals, with four to eight inches of additional rain likely and some locations potentially receiving over 10 inches of rain on Thursday.
Locations: South Florida, Floridians
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