Kingarabian wrote:As Ntxw has pointed out in the ENSO thread, the background state of the planet is nowhere near Nina (to promote an above average/average hurricane season) and it's still in a Nino state. A warm PDO, plenty of warm waters in the Pacific, a tanking SOI, and now successive WWB's ... unless these change it'll be hard in my opinion to forecast an above average season in the Atlantic. But we know numbers don't matter for the Atlantic. A disturbance in the right area at the right time can be devastating and can generate a lot of ACE.
So you're saying just because we're nowhere near an La Niña we cannot have just an average season?
Even during the Super El Niño of 2015 conditions were favorable enough to allow only an a somewhat below average season which produced two majors including a near Cat.5 in October.
Overall I'd say 2015 over-performed somewhat meaning that this season could do just the same. Obviously there are still some hints that the Atlantic MAY still be in it's active era.
It's also funny how just several months ago those who are screaming El Niño now were saying this season could be just as active or slightly more active than last season. Just goes to show how quickly things can change and that
nothing is set in stone.