In September 2017, hurricanes Katia, Irma, and Jose haunted the Atlantic at the same time. In September 2020, the Atlantic saw a total of 10 named storms, the most of any month on record, with five of those — Sally, Paulette, Rene, Teddy, and Vicki — appearing simultaneously.
With warming, some years are seeing an unusually large number of hurricanes, raising the likelihood that two or more appear at the same time. But a growing number of storms cannot fully explain why hurricanes are now so often appearing in groups. The new study, published in Nature Climate Change, concluded that Atlantic warming is actually setting the conditions for multiple hurricanes to arise all at once. Read more at: Yale Environment 360
Source: ENN
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