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Isaac, formerly a hurricane, passes Newfoundland in this satellite image from Monday at 9:45 p.m. ET.
POSTED: 11:03 a.m. EDT, October 3, 2006
FORT COLLINS, Colorado (AP) -- Hurricane expert William Gray
downgraded his forecast for the 2006 Atlantic storm season again
Tuesday, predicting one more hurricane, two more named storms but no
intense hurricanes.
The new report calls for a below-average hurricane season, with a total of six hurricanes and 11 named storms.
Gray and fellow Colorado State University researcher Philip Klotzbach cited El Nino conditions for the reduced number of storms.
"August
was inactive, but September had above-average activity," Klotzbach
said. "We expect October to have below-average activity largely due to
developing El Nino conditions in the central and eastern Pacific.
November activity in El Nino years is very rare."
The long-term
average for the June-through-November Atlantic hurricane season is 9.6
named storms, 5.9 hurricanes and 2.3 intense hurricanes, the
forecasters said.
So far this season, the Atlantic basin has seen
nine named storms and five hurricanes, the latest of them Isaac, which
broke up off Canada on Monday. (Full story)
"Despite
the lower predictions, residents living along the U.S. coastline should
always be prepared for major storms," Gray said.
In the past two
years alone, the researchers said, 13 major hurricanes formed in the
Atlantic basin, and seven struck the U.S. coast, including the
devastating Hurricane Katrina. By contrast, between 1995 and 2003, only
three major hurricanes hit land.
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