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Colorado State forecasters see below-average hurricane season

Colorado State University weather forecasters said that the 2026 Atlantic Hurricane'season is expected to be below historic averges because an 'El Nino' formation will send?winds through the southern U.S. which could tear tropical storms apart.

The CSU team predicts that an El Nino of moderate to strong intensity is likely at the peak of the Atlantic hurricane season, which is August-October.

The Atlantic hurricane season starts on June 1, and lasts until November 30. The fiercest storms are usually seen between August and October.

Colorado State's closely-watched forecast predicts that two major hurricanes with wind speeds exceeding 111 miles per hours (179 kph) will develop in 2026, out of the total of six named tropical storms.

Between 1991 and 2020, the 'average hurricane season' produced three major hurricanes from a total of seven hurricanes.

In the eastern tropical Atlantic, sea surface temperatures are also cooler than normal. In the western tropical Atlantic, sea surface temperatures are above average. This could help storm development.

Four of the five hurricanes in 2025 will be deemed major. In 2025 there were 13 named storms, which caused more than $9 billion worth of damage and claimed 126 lives. (Reporting and editing by Jan Harvey; Erwin Seba)

(source: Reuters)