"El Niño forecast to produce less active hurricane season in 2014"
From Artemis:
ImpactWeather has released its first 2014 Atlantic hurricane season
forecast today and says that it expects the development of an El Niño
by July or August to produce a less active hurricane season, with a
below average number of storms forming.
The firms 2014 Seasonal Outlook for Atlantic Hurricanes factors in a
developing El Niño influence to produce a less active than normal
hurricane season this year.
An increasing number of meteorologists are forecasting the
development of El Niño conditions in the Pacific Ocean within a few
months. El Niño typically results in a below average hurricane season in
terms of the number of storms that form.
Based on averages of past seasons, ocean temperature trends and
elevated wind shear across the Tropical Atlantic, ImpactWeather Senior
Meteorologists Fred Schmude and Chris Hebert forecast the development of
10 named storms, with 4 achieving hurricane status and 1 reaching
severe hurricane status of Category 3, 4 or 5.
Of course recent Atlantic hurricane seasons have shown that the
number of storms that form is not the main threat. We’ve seen record
seasons for tropical storm formation with little in the way of landfalls
to create loss events. Conversely some hurricane seasons in the late
90′s and early 00′s saw lower numbers of storms but multiple landfalls
resulting in heavy insurance and reinsurance losses....MORE