Climate scientists are predicting that as many as 20 named hurricanes will develop in the Atlantic basin during the six-month season that officially begins on Monday. The prediction of a super-busy season comes from separate teams at Colorado State University, Pennsylvania State University, and AccuWeather and is based on sea surface temperatures in both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans that help spawn these powerful tropical storms that threaten millions of US residents each year.

Michael Mann, author of the Penn State study, wrote in an email to WIRED that his team’s model indicates a “hyperactive” season. “The extreme current tropical Atlantic warmth is a key driver of our forecast,” he wrote, but added that other factors will contribute, including La Niña conditions, which are characterized by cooler water along the eastern tropical Pacific for several months at a time. This weakens high-level winds across the Atlantic, which allows hurricanes to grow in frequency and strength. “That’s the same combination of factors, incidentally, that was behind the record 2005 season (with 27 named storms),” he wrote. That’s the year that Hurricane Katrina pummeled New Orleans and was one of four storms to reach Category 5 levels.

Meanwhile, a separate group of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration researchers published data this week showing that hurricanes have gotten stronger over the past 40 years, fueled by warmer air and warmer water temperatures driven by global climate change. NOAA officials will release their hurricane forecast today and will be joined at a press conference by officials from the Federal Emergency Management Administration to talk about how they plan to handle evacuations and rescues while obeying social distancing restrictions.

Every hurricane season is tough, but this year, emergency experts worry that many vulnerable residents may ignore evacuation orders because of fears of contracting the coronavirus in a crowded shelter. They also are concerned that trust in elected officials who give these evacuation orders may have taken a hit over the Covid-19 pandemic, making it harder to get people to move out of harm’s way.

“Millions of families are in a different place than where they were 60 days ago,” says Trevor Riggen, senior vice president of disaster services for the American Red Cross, referring to the financial and emotional toll of the pandemic. “They need to ask themselves, ‘What should we change in our emergency plan, and who do we listen to?’ People need to adapt to a much different world. We don’t want a natural disaster to be the thing that crashes down on them.”

Getting vulnerable people to leave an area has always been difficult. Some coastal residents refuse to leave because they fear looters. Others may feel that they’ve successfully ridden out previous storms, and still others may not have anywhere to go or enough money to rent a hotel for an extended period.

The double-whammy of a powerful hurricane and a highly contagious viral outbreak has thrown emergency planners a curve. They are figuring out alternatives to shelters, ways to quickly move volunteers into a disaster zone without using commercial airlines, and prestaging masks, sanitizer, and other personal protective equipment in high-risk hurricane zones. “The Red Cross had a limited supply of varying types of PPE when the pandemic began, but we have since procured additional supplies, including face coverings, disinfectant, thermometers, and other critical supplies to keep our workforce and the people we serve safe,” a Red Cross spokesperson said.

Riggen says Red Cross shelters will require everyone to wear protective masks and will space cots and living quarters farther apart. The agency is also booking more hotel rooms so evacuees have options other than going to a local church or school. The Red Cross itself expects to have fewer of its own volunteers in a disaster zone, with up to 70 percent of relief workers working remotely. Instead of deploying logistical coordinators to the scene and having them live in a tent, for example, the agency will use online platforms to direct supplies and personnel. Caseworkers who normally meet families in a relief shelter will do so online, Riggen says.

You May Also Like

NPR wants to know what podcast ads you skip

NPR has a plan to figure out how much people actually listen…

Non-invasive treatment for prostate cancer prevents side-effects, study finds

A new non-invasive treatment for prostate cancer is the ‘single biggest change…

‘Time to buy’ bitcoin adverts banned in UK for being irresponsible

Campaign failed to say investment was complex, volatile and could expose investors…

Those Most Likely to Get Covid Are Last in Line for Vaccines

We’re already seeing the consequences of these decisions. In Washington, DC, residents…