WASHINGTON — As Idalia churns toward Florida’s Gulf Coast, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) predicts the storm will make landfall as a hurricane on Wednesday. After a slow start to the 2023 Atlantic Hurricane Season, with only four named storms forming before Aug. 20, five named storms have coalesced since then. The first half of hurricane season ends on Thursday, Aug. 31.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which runs the NHC, predicted on Aug. 10 that hurricane season would worsen into an “above normal” year because of record-warm sea surface temperatures. That upgraded prediction came after a May forecast said to expect a less severe “Near-Normal 2023 Atlantic Hurricane Season.”
To date this year, the U.S. mainland has witnessed only one Atlantic named storm (and a rare Pacific named storm.) Early last week, Tropical Storm Harold traversed southern Texas and Tropical Storm Hilary drenched parts of California and Nevada.
The Public Interest Network (which includes PIRG, Environment America, Frontier Group and state groups in Atlantic Coast and Gulf Coast states such as Florida, Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina, Texas and Virginia) is sharing information to help contextualize the major environmental, health and consumer concerns posed by the hurricanes that will inevitably come this season.
Our most recent data and graphics on potential environmental, health and consumer dangers created by hurricanes — and the flooding that follows:
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