1st look into 2025 Atlantic Hurricane season
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The 2025 Atlantic hurricane season is expected to be more active than average, with a higher chance of major hurricanes impacting the U.S. and Caribbean, according to a new forecast from Colorado Sta...
From KHOU
researchers at Colorado State University see another one on the way for 2025.
From The New York Times
Communities in Middle and West Tennessee are hunkering down as severe weather and inches of rain are expected through the weekend.
From Yahoo
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Before passing almost directly over the Houston region on July 8, when it caused widespread power outages and contributed to dozens of deaths, Hurricane Beryl devastated multiple Caribbean islands and was the earliest Category 5 storm on record in the Atlantic basin.
After a stormy week across Texas, Houston braces for severe storms Saturday and a sharp temperature drop. Get ready for dramatic weather changes.
Colorado State University and their lead hurricane expert, Dr. Phil Klotsbach, released their first look at the upcoming 2025 Atlantic hurricane seasonal forecast Thursday morning.
When a storm is particularly powerful, destructive or deadly, the name is “retired” from the rotating list, meaning it will never be used again.
The World Meteorological Organization has retired the names Beryl, Helene and Milton because of the death and destruction these storms caused in 2024.
Home batteries are becoming increasingly popular here in Houston. People are using them to keep the lights on, the refrigerator running, and the air conditioning humming during an outage, which is what the Wright family did when Hurricane Beryl in August 2024.
Texas is one of four states at an increased risk of seeing a direct hit from a hurricane or tropical storm with the coming 2025 Atlantic hurricane season, AccuWeather meteorologists told Newsweek. The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 through November 30. On Wednesday, AccuWeather r eleased its 2025 hurricane forecast.
The utility leased the 15 large, mobile generators at a cost of more than $800 million after the widespread power failures tied to the 2021 winter storm. The generators proved largely useless in the wake of last year’s Hurricane Beryl.
Houston faces summer-like warmth and humidity in early April, but a weekend cold front brings a dramatic temperature drop to winter-like levels.