Teban54 wrote:I also think the sparse population in the landfall region, while hopefully keeping the price tag down, should absolutely be factored into the decision for retirement beyond monetary damage. Suppose Idalia had the same cost as Sally ($7.3 billion, costliest hurricane to not be retired). Then the fact that Idalia hit a much smaller population would suggest that it hit a lot harder, had more severe localized impacts and is a more historic storm compared to Sally. Those people, despite being smaller in number, had their lives affected much more by Idalia, which is a much stronger argument for retirement than Sally had.
This is a good point, but we should factor death toll as well. Obviously there isn't (nor should there be) some "clear cut" magical number that determines retirement, but early reports from AP are one death in Georgia, and two in Florida from two separate car crashes and authorities haven't yet determined if they are actually storm related. We should hopefully see a very low death toll compared to most modern hurricanes making landfall and we should factor this as well into the retirement decision.
Teban54 wrote:While Idalia may be a more borderline case for retirement than originally thought (thankfully), I still think it does warrant retirement based on what we know now. At least if it started with a more easily replaceable letter.
Well, thats kind of the rub innit? If we have such a "borderline" case, the fact that its the most difficult letter to replace currently should also factor into it.
At the end of the day, all cyclones are inherently destructive and cause tragedy. That is what they do at landfall. They all cause damage one way or another, even the most minimal tropical storms. Most of us on S2k live on the Gulf or East coast and we all remember "our" storms. Everyone who has gone through a storm has had their lives affected, because thats what storms do. But we shouldn't keep such a low bar for retirement unless the WMO are going to change the naming scheme, otherwise we might as well retire every storm in which people had their lives affected.