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June 15, 2025 Hurricane Season Sunday - by Dr. Ryan Maue

Published 2 weeks ago5 minute read

. My expectation for this year is 14 named storms, 7 hurricanes, and 3 majors. So far, 0 named storms, 0 hurricane, and 0 majors.

Dalila is absorbed back into the ITCZ and trade winds without much enhancement of the Southwest U.S. monsoon.

(—> Erick) develops into a hurricane south of Mexico / Guatemala with the resulting moisture dragged across Texas into the Plains and a powerful midlatitude storm system over the Midwest and Great Lakes by next weekend.

Strong High Pressure anchored over the Pacific at the surface assisting with offshore flow across the U.S. Southwest (very hot) with mid-level ridging dominating the Western U.S.

Ridge builds across the Northeast U.S. for much hotter weather into Days 7-10 with NYC pushing 100°F

Nobody home for next 7-days.

Dust layer from the Lesser Antilles to the Cape Verde Islands is noticed on visible satellite as a brown haze within shallow clouds w/o convection.

The dust isn’t as intense but does hold together across the entire Atlantic perhaps due to the brisk easterly trade winds.

This depiction uses ECMWF SSTs with a recent 20-year model hindcast climatology. The central Atlantic remains cooler than normal for June 15 with warmer than normal stretching from the Gulf of Mexico and across Bermuda.

However, actual SSTs are what matter and the 26°C and 28°C isotherms remain constrained to the MDR, Caribbean and Gulf. Mid-June is too early for tropical storm activity too far out in the Atlantic.

Note the development of a with cool waters < 26°C similar to what you’d see near the Galapagos in the eastern tropical Pacific.

Forecast SST + Anomaly in 2-weeks

Not seeing dramatic warming of the Atlantic aside from climatological into summer.

Difficult to even scare up a shower across the Tropical Atlantic. Just fair weather clouds in a dusty atmosphere from the Caribbean to the coast of Africa.

but no development expected [plausible or possible] at least in the Atlantic for 3 of them. However, Invest 94E is crossing Central America and has a 60% chance of development in the Eastern Pacific.

Thank you to readers continuing into this Hurricane Season. My goal is to keep you informed about ongoing extreme weather events inside and outside of the tropics, but also a week (hopefully) heads up on what’s coming. I’ll be using a variety of weather modeling output, some of it may be unfamiliar, but it’s state-of-the-art and industry leading standard.

Dry air with embedded anticyclonic swirls cruising westward at 25°N within the large scale easterly flow. The ITCZ/Monsoon trough does have PWAT > 2” but waves are devoid of convection = too stable. The only show in town is over Central America and then into the Eastern Pacific off the far SE coast of southern Mexico and Guatemala with Invest 94E.

Days 0 to 10 Relative Vorticity | See footnotes

Dalila is gone and then we watch the potential rapid intensification of Invest 94E into before making landfall in Mexico by Friday.

These are 51-realizations of the same model with different initial conditions. Each ensemble gets equal ~2% weight in a mean calculation.

Blank slate except for tiny chance (< 5%) in western Gulf with cross-basin system or transfer of moisture/vorticity, but only 1 member out of 51 survives at named storm intensity.

Nothing else to see in the next 2-weeks = June 29th — almost through June.

Convection with Tropical Storm Dalila is almost completely gone as it will be a remnant low by this afternoon.

Next area of disturbed weather is crossing Central America with active convection over the warm waters.

The ATCF Spaghetti tracks are tightly clustered on landfall in Mexico and perhaps still something to track after crossing into the edge of the Bay of Campeche by next weekend.

is bullish on a small but powerful Hurricane Erick in 4-days nearing the coast

is also on board with a tiny hurricane

HWRF 06z +5 days

Waters along the coast of Mexico are warm but not exceptionally — in the 28°C range — where Invest 94E is tracking. The 26°C isotherm abruptly ends south of Baja California at 15°N. The EPAC will have 4 storms by next week total for a season, but the overall basin signal is screaming inactivity with the cooler waters.

Regardless if Erick survives the transit through the Tehauntepec Gap into the southern Bay of Campeche, the deep layer moisture flow will take its remnants into Mexico and Texas by next weekend = more rain for the Lone Star State.

Ensembles are almost all on board with development of Erick … some are at hurricane intensity in 84-hours.

Then, by June 25th, the EPAC is quiet with number of active ensemble tracks < 20% = lower chance of another system.

Final warning on Tropical Storm Wutip (01W) was issued … and no other areas are being watched.

Signal for tropical storms or typhoons after Wutip through 7-days is for something in the South China Sea.

Slightly more activity by Day 10, but still LOW chance of development.

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June 2025: We use the ECMWF for medium-range prediction because the GFS can’t be trusted due to false-alarm bias, and unrealistic intensification of tropical convection into spurious (ghost) storms. I don’t agree this is a good thing like CNN.

We can look at the GFS every day for weeks and see a modeled tropical storm or hurricane in the Caribbean or Gulf especially after Day 10. However, this is a known bias/false alarm problem with spurious convective — vorticity spin-ups due to the convective parameterization or estimation of vorticity generation due to intense diabatic heating. Perhaps it’s worthwhile to show what will not happen.

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