Back in May, many media outlets ran with this headline courtesy of a press release from NOAA:
NOAA predicts above-normal 2022 Atlantic Hurricane Season
Media outlets like Houston Public Media trumpeted it as if it was fact, saying: [bold, links added]
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) released its 2022 Atlantic Hurricane Forecast, predicting an “above normal” hurricane season.
NOAA says there is a 70% chance of 14-21 storms forming, with as many as ten potentially becoming hurricanes. Three to six of these storms could become major hurricanes.
…
NOAA administrator Dr. Rick Spinrad said the past two hurricane seasons were “extremely active” and the first to run out of their annual 21 storm names in back-to-back years.
Spinrad also detailed the improvements that NOAA forecasts have made over the past few years. He attributed their advancements to NOAA’s weather forecast system, Hurricane Hunter flight data, and the administration’s ability to accurately pinpoint at-risk areas.
“Along with better science, we’ll ultimately make way for better hurricane forecast model guidance for years to come,” Spinrad said.
But that “better science” has so far been a bust. The problem is, as nearly three months have elapsed since the official start of hurricane season on June 1, not one has yet materialized.
As The Weather Channel (TWC) reported this week, “It’s The Atlantic Hurricane Season’s Least Active Start In 30 Years”
TWC had some succinct points:
- By one metric, the start of the 2022 hurricane season is the least active since 1992.
- Two recent Gulf disturbances failed to become tropical depressions or storms.
- Activity is expected to pick up in the coming weeks.
While the number of storms isn’t pacing far below the season-to-date average, Colorado State University tropical scientist Phil Klotzbach pointed out it was the first time in 40 years that no named storms formed from July 3 – August 22 in the Atlantic Basin.
…
As of Aug. 20, the 2022 hurricane season’s ACE index is pacing at the lowest of any year since 1992, according to Kim Wood, associate professor at Mississippi State University.
Short for Accumulated Cyclone Energy, the ACE index sums up how long storms last and how intense they become, instead of just raw counts of storms.
Each of the Atlantic Basin’s three storms was relatively weak and short-lived, though Bonnie went on to become a hurricane in the Eastern Pacific Basin.
That ACE value, tracked by hurricane expert Dr. Ryan Maue, showed a marked drop to just 24% of normal for the year to date, as seen highlighted in the table below:
Both NOAA and the media have now gone into damage control mode, insisting with a new press release on August 4, 2022, that with the “better science” they claim they have, it could still happen.
Some of the headlines included:
Yet it has now been almost four weeks later, and there have been no hurricanes, no tropical storms, not even a significant disturbance.
According to this graphic from the National Hurricane Center, at 1:37 PM EDT Fri Aug 26, 2022, the Atlantic is devoid of any storms at all.
We are often told by climate experts and climate activists to “follow the science.” But when science fails to produce accurate forecasts, who should we follow then?
Read more at Climate Realism
They blame all Hurricanes since Katrina on Global Warming/Climate Change the M.S. Media idiots that one of the reasons i quit the M.S. Media gutter dwellers
The ACE data is a game changer. Alarmism may have met its nemesis.
Agriculture has a new crop condition and forecast tool called Gro Intelligence. Before the USDA and the Pro Farmer crop tour made their 2022 yield forecasts, Gro Intelligence nailed it weeks before. How? Accumulated data from satellites and ground based weather statistics and “machine learning” . Instead of random sampling and telephone surveys, it looks at everything, 24/7. They’ve been fine tuning it and selling forecasts to commodity traders.
Technology like Accumulated Cyclone Energy and Gro Intelligence is going to put a bunch of BS merchants out of work.
Let’s hope the alarmist will be put out of business. But it never seems to turn out that way with 100’s of millions of government $$ funding research that keeps the lies going.
I’m sure NOAA is probably aware of components that have gone into the “doldrums” creating a weak Atlantic hurricane season (to date). I believe the articles author (Mr. Watts) on a recent Heartland podcast suggested that dust levels in west Africa & atmospheric “wind sheer” over N. America were (likely) creating the lower activity levels. Perhaps ocean currents have played a part? Regardless, if the “”activists” were actually interested in science, they’d be looking at the ongoing results & the NOAA model parameters rather than trying to PROJECT a higher activity level in the media. That would be an HONEST application of the scientific method. It’s still early, but as a former Gulf Coast resident, I’m sure most folks aren’t disappointed with the lack of storm formation so far… :
Heading to a resort south of Cancun on Wednesday for vacation with my wife so grateful that there have been no hurricanes and things look good for the week.