Hurricane Hazards and Outlook for 2012 Dan Reilly Warning Coordination Meteorologist National Weather Service, Houston/Galveston
Oct 30, 2014
Hurricane Hazards and Outlook for 2012
Dan ReillyWarning Coordination Meteorologist
National Weather Service, Houston/Galveston
Outline
• Hurricane hazards (storm surge, high winds, flooding rains, tornadoes)
• Past hurricane seasons (what is typical)
• 2012 Atlantic hurricane outlook
Tropical Cyclone Classifications
◆ Tropical Depression: Max Sustained Winds less than 39 mph
◆ Tropical Storm: Max Sustained Winds 39-73 mph
◆ Hurricane: Max Sustained Winds 74 mph or greater
Hurricane Ike View from Radar
Spiral Bands
Eye Wall
Hurricane Hazards
Storm Surge Tornadoes
FloodingDamaging Winds
Early rise trapped some on Bolivar, Galveston Island
Lesson learned: don’t wait too long to leave surge zones, especially barrier islands; Need to account for the forerunner
Hurricane Ike: Bolivar Peninsula Devastation
Image courtesy of www.hawkeyemedia.com/bolivar/
To Evaluate Your Risk, Need to Know
Your Elevation!
What About Fort Bend County?
Know Your Elevation to Determine Risk for Surge
Elevation around Fort Bend County 70 to 120 feet
HURRICANE WINDS
Category 1-min. Sustained Winds (mph)
Storm Examples Wind Impacts
Tropical Depression
Less than 39 mph Relatively minor
Tropical Storm
Between 39 and 73 Allison Can be significant
1 74 - 95 Jerry 1989 Very dangerous; will produce
Claudette 2003 some damage
Humberto 2007
2 96 - 110 Georges 1998Ike 2008
Extremely dangerous; will produce extensive damage
3 111 - 129 Alicia 1983 Devastating damage
Katrina 2005
Rita 2005
4 130 - 156 1900 - Galveston Catastrophic damage
Carla 1961
5 157 or greater Andrew 1992 Catastrophic damage
Camille 1969
Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale
Large Cat 2 high surge and moderate wind impact over large area
Small Cat 4 modest surge near eyewall only; extreme wind impact near eyewall;
Charlie, 2004Ike, 2008
Cat 1 Damage in Houston
Typical damage with Ike around Houston: downed or snapped Trees, some roof damage
2004 Hurricane Charley – SW Florida
CAT 4 Wind in Purple
Greens Bayou, Home Owned Estates – June 10, 2001Greens Bayou, Home Owned Estates – June 10, 2001
Flooding from Rainfall From Tropical Cyclones
Tropical Storm Allison June 2001 Looped Over SE Texas; 36.99 inches of rain Port of Houston
Some Notable Flood-Producing Storms
3-71FEMA Hurricane Readiness Coastal Communities
04/08/2023 Weather.gov/houston 24
From Ashley and Ashley, 2008; 50 years of data across the U.S.
Hurricane Threats: Tornadoes
Hurricane Carla (1961)
5 Killed by F3 tornado in Galveston
Tornadic storms are embedded in rain bands generally in the northeast quadrant of the storm
Tornadoes can also form within the eyewall (less common)
Hurricane Outlook for 2012
• Year to Year Variability in the Atlantic• What is an “active” year? Was 2011
active?• What can we expect for 2012?
– Typically based on El Nino/La Nina cycle, Atlantic SSTs and MDO
Note Multi-year Variability in Atlantic Activity
Atlantic Hurricane Outlooks 2011Forecast Group Number of
Named StormsNumber of Hurricanes
Number of Major Hurricanes
ACE
Long-Term Average
12 6.5 2 92
National Weather Service
15 8 4.5
Colorado State 16 9 5 160
Penn State 16
Florida State 19 9 163
Cuba Institute 13 7
Impact Weather 14 8 4
Accuweather 15 8 3
Actual 19 7 4
19 Named Storms, 7 Hurricanes, 4 Major Hurricanes
Atlantic Hurricane Outlooks 2012Forecast Group Number of
Named StormsNumber of Hurricanes
Number of Major Hurricanes
ACE
Long-Term Average (1981-2010)
12 6.5 2 92
National Weather Service
Colorado State 10 4 2 70
WSI 11 6 2
Penn State
Florida State
Cuba Institute 10 5
Impact Weather
Accuweather
Actual
Least active season 1983 (4 named storms!)No El Nino or La Nina (neutral)
1983, VERY Quiet Season (or was it?)
Very low number of storms, but one with major impact on SE Texas
Tropical Cyclone Preparation
www.hurricanes.gov (National Hurricane Center Web Site)
National Weather Service Web Sitesweather.gov, weather.gov/houston
• Graphical and text forecasts• Recorded briefings• Hurricane audio and video briefings if a
storm is approaching• Facebook page (Like us!)
Also check out your Office of Emergency Management pages, Social Media for weather info and alerts!
http://www.ready.govHurricanes.gov/preparehttp://www.fbcoem.org/
More Preparedness Info at:
• Make a plan• If I choose to
evacuate• Build a kit
• Non-perishable food items
• Water• Medicines• Battery powered
radio• Can opener
• Keep tank full• Have cash on hand