Rapidly intensifying Hurricane Erin becomes historic storm due to strengthening

Date:

Share:



Erin’s central pressure was in the 990s this time yesterday, and it’s now in the 920’s heading for the teens.

This will make Erin the fastest deepening Atlantic hurricane before Sept 1st. Beating Emily 2005, by a lot.

[image or embed]

— Sam Lillo (@samlillo.bsky.social) August 16, 2025 at 9:29 AM

With a central pressure of 917 mb on Saturday, Erin ranks as the second-most intense Atlantic in the last 50 years prior to today’s date, behind only Hurricane Allen in 1980.

Rapid intensification becoming more common

Storms like Erin are predicted to become more common due to climate change, scientists say. One study in 2019 found that, for the strongest 5 percent of Atlantic hurricanes, 24-hour intensification rates increased by about 3–4 mph per decade from 1982 to 2009. “Our results suggest a detectable increase of Atlantic intensification rates with a positive contribution from anthropogenic forcing,” the authors of the study, in Nature Communications, wrote.

Hurricane scientists generally agree that although the overall number of tropical storms and hurricanes may not increase in a warmer world, such background conditions are likely to produce more intense storms like Erin.

According to the US government’s Climate.gov website, this increase in intensity of tropical cyclones (TCs) is happening due to human-caused climate change.

“The proportion of severe TCs (Category 4 & 5) has increased, possibly due to anthropogenic climate change,” a coalition of authors wrote. “This proportion of intense TCs is projected to increase further, bringing a greater proportion of storms having more damaging wind speeds, higher storm surges, and more extreme rainfall rates. Most climate model studies project a corresponding reduction in the proportion of low-intensity cyclones, so the total number of TCs each year is projected to decrease or remain approximately the same.”

To date this year the tropical Atlantic has seen lower overall activity than usual. But with Erin’s longevity and intensity this season should soon reach and surpass normal levels of Accumulated Cyclone Energy, a measurement of a season’s total activity. The Atlantic season typically peaks in early September, with the majority of storms forming between early August and early October.

Forecast models indicate the likely development of more hurricanes within the next two weeks, but there is no clear consensus on whether they will impact land.



Source link

━ more like this

MasterClass deal: Subscriptions are 40 percent off right now

If you want to brush up on some skills or learn new ones, MasterClass offers a good way to do just that. The...

Ready to try Apple’s iOS 26? Here are all the compatible iPhones that can run public beta 2 today

Soon after the Apple iPhone event takes place, we'll finally have access to iOS 26 and iPadOS 26 — both of which are...

AI Is Designing Bizarre New Physics Experiments That Actually Work

“LIGO is this huge thing that thousands of people have been thinking about deeply for 40 years,” said Aephraim Steinberg, an expert on...

Roblox cracks down on its user-created content following multiple child safety lawsuits

Following a wave of lawsuits alleging that Roblox doesn't provide a safe environment for its underage users, the gaming platform made a series...
spot_img