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cycloneye wrote:94E going up shortly.Tropical Weather Outlook
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
500 PM PDT Wed Jun 16 2021
For the eastern North Pacific...east of 140 degrees west longitude:
1. A surface trough of low pressure is producing a large area of
disorganized showers and thunderstorms that extends several hundred
miles south of the coast of southern Mexico. Environmental
conditions appear conducive for development of this system, and a
tropical depression is likely to form late this week while moving
west-northwestward or northwestward at 5 to 10 mph, near the coast
of southwestern Mexico. Regardless of development, heavy rains are
likely over coastal sections of the Mexican states of Oaxaca,
Guerrero, Michoacan, Colima, and Jalisco during the next few days,
which could cause life-threatening flash floods and mud slides.
Interests in these areas should monitor the progress of this system
through the weekend.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...medium...60 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...high...80 percent.
Forecaster Reinhart/Beven
Weather Dude wrote:Anyone know why they like to take so long to tag invests in the EPAC? Seems like they always wait so much longer than they do for Atlantic systems
Kingarabian wrote:Weather Dude wrote:Anyone know why they like to take so long to tag invests in the EPAC? Seems like they always wait so much longer than they do for Atlantic systems
No clue. They are being pretty conservative with this system. Odds should be higher than 60/80.
aspen wrote:Kingarabian wrote:Weather Dude wrote:Anyone know why they like to take so long to tag invests in the EPAC? Seems like they always wait so much longer than they do for Atlantic systems
No clue. They are being pretty conservative with this system. Odds should be higher than 60/80.
I think they’re being conservative because of how close it’ll be to the coast, meaning it can possibly run into land before even becoming a classifiable TC.
Yellow Evan wrote:aspen wrote:Kingarabian wrote:No clue. They are being pretty conservative with this system. Odds should be higher than 60/80.
I think they’re being conservative because of how close it’ll be to the coast, meaning it can possibly run into land before even becoming a classifiable TC.
They're being conservative likely because the ECMWF isn't that aggressive, and the GFS has a terrible track record of tropical cyclone genesis.
Kingarabian wrote:Ignoring the storm quality advantage in 1990 and 2018, 2021 so far is producing storms at a similar quick rate.
1990:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/timeline/6a0a22a0c8bf74e5e314fe4aa47f4ca7.png
2018:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/timeline/00182b2c1e62b459d5410470c42c8bc9.png
It's possible we'll see elevated activity in the EPAC through September, similar to 1990 and 2017 but nothing near those intensities. I also doubt October will be active.
If we see increased negative anomalies in the subsurface within the next 4 weeks I fully expect the EPAC hurricane season to begin to shut down near mid September.
aspen wrote:Kingarabian wrote:Ignoring the storm quality advantage in 1990 and 2018, 2021 so far is producing storms at a similar quick rate.
1990:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/timeline/6a0a22a0c8bf74e5e314fe4aa47f4ca7.png
2018:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/timeline/00182b2c1e62b459d5410470c42c8bc9.png
It's possible we'll see elevated activity in the EPAC through September, similar to 1990 and 2017 but nothing near those intensities. I also doubt October will be active.
If we see increased negative anomalies in the subsurface within the next 4 weeks I fully expect the EPAC hurricane season to begin to shut down near mid September.
With a neutral ENSO slowly transitioning into a cool neutral ENSO through the fall, it’s likely most EPac storms will struggle comparable to last season. Probably lots of slop with the occasional significant TC, again like last year.
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