2026 names

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Hayabusa wrote:The possibility of El Nino in 2026 makes it a prospect of an active season, what do you guys think?
Ulf wrote:Hayabusa wrote:The possibility of El Nino in 2026 makes it a prospect of an active season, what do you guys think?
WPAC has not had a season with above average activity since 2019. So, this year might be the one that breaks this streak though one must remember that 2023 also had a strong El Niño but only managed to pump out 17 storms including 10 typhoons even if most of those were major.

Hayabusa wrote:The possibility of El Nino in 2026 makes it a prospect of an active season, what do you guys think?
2026 names
https://i.imgur.com/zf0FMFX.png





cycloneye wrote:Watching how strong the next MJO will be.
https://x.com/WxTca/status/2019183031664226686










Hayabusa wrote:
Yeah, there's still nothing from the models with the coming MJO/ enhanced low level westerlies but recently the ensembles from the Euro AI is waking up
https://i.imgur.com/G43qKt7.png
GFS alone is showing low latitude development by next week but I don't really consider it given that we now have AI models that are more reliable for TCG



Yellow Evan wrote:ACE analog average for WPAC: 397 ACE (based on the best unofficial totals I can find)
Tentative ACE forecast: 330 ACE
Confidence is increasing that the season will be the most active of the decade. However, uncertainty on how classical of an El Niño evolution and the role of mid/summer warmth in the mid-latitudes remains. If trades do not consistently relax east of Guam much like 2023 (not an analog) and 2014, and this El Niño’s strength is more fueled by subsurface warmth and is likely more eastern based as a result, the typical El Niño western Pacific response will not materialize, although the expected persistence of +PMM makes this less likely.



dexterlabio wrote:I wonder if the March WWB predicted in this region would translate to at least one typhoon (or super typhoon maybe). Models are not yet showing anything significant in the next two weeks.
A tell-tale sign for an incoming strong (classic) El Niño is the occurence of early-season super typhoons.
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