NEW YORK, United States - The world’s largest private commercial weather forecaster has upped the storm potential for this year’s hurricane season, predicting 16 named storms instead of the 13 forecasted by hurricane experts at Colorado State University.
Yesterday, April 20, the Massachusetts-based WSI Corporation laid out a forecast for the 2010 Atlantic hurricane season that included 16 named storms, nine hurricanes and five intense hurricanes of Category 3 or greater.

"The primary drivers for tropical activity have reversed course this year and the stage appears to be set for a very busy season in 2010," WSI seasonal forecaster Todd Crawford said in an interview with Reuters.

"Our model suggests that the threat to the Northeast coast this season is on par with that in Florida and the Gulf coastal states," Crawford said.

Last year was the quietest tropical season since 1997 due to an El Nino event and relatively cool tropical Atlantic waters, but El Nino events tend to be followed by more activity, WSI said.

This year, another factor that increases the likelihood of storms, warmer Atlantic sea surface temperatures, are also in place.

"Eastern and central tropical Atlantic sea surface temperatures are currently at record warm levels for April, even warmer than the freakishly active season of 2005," Crawford said.
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The current forecast numbers are more likely to be adjusted upwards rather than downwards as the season, which runs from June 1 through November 30, approaches, Crawford said.

The 2010 forecast numbers are well above the long-term average for 1950-2009 of 10 named storms, six hurricanes, and three intense hurricanes, but below the average from the more recent 15-year period of 14 names storms, eight hurricanes and four intense hurricanes.

WSI is a member of The Weather Channel Companies and is headquartered in Andover, Massachusetts, with offices in Birmingham, England. Top clients include CNN, FOX, NBC, American Airlines, Delta, and FedEX. WSI aggregates and analyses weather feeds from the U.S. National Weather Service, U.S. military, Canadian, British, and Japanese governments, other international agencies, and commercial vendors and these are analysed and distributed worldwide by its staff of 220, which includes approximately 100 degreed meteorologists.