While the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) held firm to its prediction of an above-normal hurricane season – despite zero hurricanes at the halfway mark – the 2022 season proved to be nothing out of the ordinary.
Hurricane season, which runs from June through November annually, turned out to be pretty average this year, NOAA’s end-of-season report reveals.
There were just two “major” hurricanes (categories 3-5), below the annual average of three and less than NOAA’s prediction that there would be 3-6.
The eight total hurricanes (categories 1-5) this year falls dead-center in NOAA’s forecasted range. And, the total count of named storms (which had hurricane potential) barely hit the lowest number in NOAA’s forecasted range:
* Hurricanes Forecast: 6-10; actual: 8; average year: 7
* Major Hurricanes Forecast: 3-6; actual: 2; average year: 3
* Named Storms Forecast: 14-21, actual: 14; average year: 14
Two of this year’s hurricanes made landfall, with one hitting twice. NOAA does not forecast the number of hurricanes that will hit a U.S. coast.
Despite the mundane final results, NOAA characterizes the 2022 hurricane season as “unique”:
“This unique season was defined by a rare mid-season pause in storms that scientists preliminarily believe was caused by increased wind shear and suppressed atmospheric moisture high over the Atlantic Ocean.”
After June through August proved to be the slowest start to a hurricane season in 30 years, NOAA issued a minor revision to its forecast:
“NOAA forecasters have slightly decreased the likelihood of an above-normal Atlantic hurricane season to 60% (lowered from the outlook issued in May, which predicted a 65% chance).”
“NOAA still expects above-normal Atlantic hurricane season,” the revised forecast insisted.
But, not all experts have been quick to embrace NOAA’s gloomy forecast or to attribute any increase in hurricane activity to climate change.
“[D]espite what you may have heard, Atlantic hurricanes are not becoming more frequent. In fact, the frequency of hurricanes making landfall in the continental U.S. has declined slightly since 1900,” Hoover Institution Visiting Fellow Bjorn Lomborg noted in a piece published by The Wall Street Journal.
As Hot Air has reported, the “number and strength of hurricanes stubbornly fail to increase.”
“There is no global trend in the number of tropical storms or hurricanes during the past 50+ years,” Meteorologist Dr. Ryan Maue agrees.
As for the effect of climate change, a study by the Global Warming Policy Foundation concluded that: “[T]here is little evidence that global warming has resulted in more hurricanes, or more intense ones in recent years.”
“On the contrary,” the study finds: “available evidence confirms that hurricane and major hurricane frequency has been similar in many prior periods.”
Nonetheless, national media, like Reuters, that publish apocalyptic warnings about climate change, steadfastly continue to promote claims that blame climate change for hurricane frequency and intensity.
Read more at CNS News
Its quite plain that NOAA needs better management then the false prophets of Doom and Gloom running them now
People who make a living trading commodities hire private forecasters for a good reason. Competence is rewarded with loyalty. NOAA is funded unconditionally by the government. Unapologetic excuses for errors should be scorned and the alarmism exposed.
Lousy is an understatement. If their desire was to provide real predictions rather than push an anthropogenic climate apocalypse then they might have been closer to what happened. Unfortunately that’s not their goal.
You have to understand the political game they’re playing. We’ll just adjust the prediction midstream so WE’RE ALWAYS RIGHT!!! Daily fearmongering overrides memory.
This is very typical of the pattern of climate change advocates, which certainly includes NOAA, making predictions that fail. On prediction made a number of years ago, not by NOAA, was that by now we would be having five category hurricanes a year.