Florida residents might want to stock up on water, batteries, canned food and plywood to board up windows.

Weather analysts at Colorado State University’s Department of Atmospheric Science in Fort Collins estimate that the 2022 Atlantic hurricane season will be an active one that produces 19 named storms, nine hurricanes and four major hurricanes (reaching wind speeds of 111 mph and up).
“If the model goes as predicted, this would be our seventh above-normal hurricane season in a row,” said research scientist Dr. Phil Klotzbach at CSU.
CSU is forecasting a 75 percent chance of a hurricane coming within 50 miles of Florida this season and a 44 percent chance of a major hurricane within 50 miles of Florida’s coastline.
The probabilities go down to 56 percent chance of a hurricane coming within 50 miles of Louisiana and North Carolina, and a 54 percent chance of a hurricane getting within 50 miles of Texas (see chart below).

The Atlantic had three quiet hurricane seasons from 2013-2015, followed by six above-average seasons in a row from 2016-2021, including hyperactive seasons in 2017, 2020 and 2021.
In a tradition that dates back 37 years, Colorado State University makes the first predictions for the upcoming hurricane season each April, a full month ahead of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Jasmine Blackwell, public affairs officer for NOAA’s National Weather Service, said NOAA has not yet set a date for a new briefing on its forecast for the 2022 hurricane season, but the National Hurricane Center will host its annual conference April 14 in Miami.
During a live online news conference Thursday, Klotzbach said they don’t expect El Niño to play a major role in this year’s hurricane season, which runs from June 1 to Nov. 30. This is not the news the Southeast U.S., Central America and South America hoped to hear.
According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, El Niño is a climate pattern characterized by unusually warm ocean temperatures in the Equatorial Pacific (as opposed to La Niña, which results in unusually cold ocean temperatures in the Equatorial Pacific).
El Nino reduces hurricane and tropical storm activity by generating increased vertical wind shear. La Niña has the opposite effect.
If La Niña continues to be the dominant weather pattern, as it was in 2021, 2022 could be an active storm season. Last year’s hurricane season was the third-highest on record.
In an initial report issued Dec. 10, the Colorado State University Tropical Meteorology Project estimated that there is a 40 percent chance that North Atlantic sea temperatures will be above average with no El Niño impacts in 2022.