Hurricane Beryl To Intensify Into “Extremely Dangerous Cat. 4” Storm
Hurricane Beryl formed in the Atlantic Basin this weekend and is forecasted to strengthen into a category-four hurricane as it barrels through the southeast Caribbean in the coming days.
“Hurricane Beryl is expected to be an extremely dangerous Category 4 hurricane when it reaches the Windward Islands early Monday,” the National Hurricane Center wrote in a message on Sunday.
On Sunday morning, Beryl was located about 465 miles from Barbados, packing winds in excess of 100 mph and moving west at 21 mph. The storm is rated as a Category 2 on the Saffir-Simpson scale and could rapidly intensify to Category 4 status.
Hurricane warnings have been posted for Barbados, St. Lucia, Grenada, St. Vincent and the Grenadines.
“Only five major (Category 3+) hurricanes have been recorded in the Atlantic before the first week of July. Beryl would be the sixth and earliest this far east in the tropical Atlantic,” hurricane expert Michael Lowry wrote on X.
Breaking: Hurricane Beryl is intensifying at a rate unprecedented in our historical archives for so early in the season. Records date back to 1851.
It may become the first June Atlantic Category 4 on record.
There exists a strong climate link. https://t.co/WzhDEvyt39 pic.twitter.com/ufnKJs6tsO
— Matthew Cappucci (@MatthewCappucci) June 30, 2024
Beryl is expected to pass south of Barbados early Monday and then head into the Caribbean Sea as a major hurricane on a path toward Jamaica. The storm will weaken by the end of the week but remain a hurricane as it churns toward the Yucatán Peninsula.
The ECMWF Ensemble and GEFS Ensemble shed more color on Beryl’s potential future track. These models indicate that the storm’s potential track could shift north after landfall around the Yucatán Peninsula and, after that, move towards the US Gulf Coast, where major refineries are located.
ECMWF Ensemble
GEFS Ensemble
And there’s activity behind Beryl.
We now have Invest 96 behind Beryl. Following in the footsteps for awhile. Some initial spaghetti models are out. I am sure these will change but its an early idea. https://t.co/Hk3pbO7x8H pic.twitter.com/SImOlJbCNh
— Mike’s Weather Page (@tropicalupdate) June 30, 2024
We have pointed out that this hurricane season, the Biden administration must contend with an elevated number of storms. It only takes one major storm to disrupt Gulf Coast refineries, which would catapult average gasoline prices at the pump to the politically sensitive $4 a gallon before the elections this fall.
Tyler Durden
Sun, 06/30/2024 – 09:55