Will the 2024 hurricane season be prolific? This is what the experts say
Hurricane season is off to a historic start, with experts raising concerns about what is to come not only this year but in those to come.


Hurricane season begins on June 1 each year, and this year, it is off to a historic start. Hurricane Beryl has left a path of devastation across the Caribbean, with the Cayman Islands awaiting the storm’s arrival this evening.
Hurricane #Beryl Advisory 23A: Center of Beryl Passing Southwest of Grand Cayman Island. Strong Winds, Dangerous Storm Surge, and Damaging Waves Expected In the Cayman Islands This Morning. https://t.co/tW4KeGe9uJ
— National Hurricane Center (@NHC_Atlantic) July 4, 2024
This image captured at the International Space Station might help you understand the size of Hurricane Beryl.
Monster hurricane Beryl from above, on the International Space Station.
— Chris Hadfield (@Cmdr_Hadfield) July 4, 2024
(shown at twice actual speed, via @NASA) pic.twitter.com/yHp3R2jNLN
NOAA’s warning about the 2024 Hurricane Season
Beryl is the earliest Category 5 hurricane in the Atlantic since records have been kept. The storm’s power was made possible thanks to increased ocean temperatures, which fuel these storms and indicate that the season could see more storms like Beryl. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Adminstration (NOAA) has said as much, releasing their forecast for the 2024 hurricane season which showed that activity in the Atlantic was expected to be higher than usual. NOAA’s models showed an 85 percent chance of this season being “an above-normal Atlantic hurricane season, with 17-25 named storms (average is 14), 8-13 hurricanes (average is 7), and 4-7 major hurricanes (average is 3).”
How the nature of hurricanes is changing
NASA’s Goddard program noted that warmer-than-average ocean temperatures “help set the stage for an active [hurricane] season.”
Today is the start of hurricane season in the Atlantic. Warm ocean temperatures help set the stage for an active season. At Goddard, we study the ways our warming climate is changing storm development, and help monitor recovery from hurricane damage. pic.twitter.com/A4z5Bj1JMK
— NASA Goddard (@NASAGoddard) June 1, 2024
NASA’s Mara Cordero-Funetes answered the question on the minds of many: are hurricanes getting stronger? Cordero-Fuentes noted that while the physics of a hurricane does not allow it to exceed the wind speeds of a Category 5 storm, stronger storms (Categories 3-5) are being recorded each season that passes.
The dangers of inaction
Once ocean temperatures begin to rise, which there is clear evidence is already happening, a vicious cycle is unlocked. In mid-June, professor and climate scientist Eliot Jacobson reported that since March 14, 2023, ocean temperatures had risen consecutively and described the notion that temperatures would return to their previous levels as a “fantasy.”
We are now at 459 consecutive days (and counting) of record global sea surface temperatures, beginning March 14, 2023.
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) June 16, 2024
This mayhem started well before last year's El Niño had any influence. Expecting ocean temperatures to return to their pre-2023 levels this year is a fantasy. pic.twitter.com/qY4xgUyJ6l
Warmer ocean temperatures lead to more sea ice melting, and within the sea ice and permafrost, there is previously methan that, when frozen, remained trapped.
When this methane is released into the atmosphere, it traps more heat on the planet, further increasing ocean temperatures. This forms a cycle where more sea ice melts, more methane is released, and on and on.
A complicating factor for climate scientists is that it is hard to predict the pace of warming. To illustrate, imagine a pot of water boiling over a burner in your kitchen. The water doesn’t start boiling immediately upon contact with the heat. First, it absorbs some heat, and only when it has absorbed enough does it begin to boil slowly, eventually reaching higher intensity if the heat level remains constant. Scientists know that the ocean is absorbing heat. Still, they cannot accurately predict how rapidly this process occurs due to the numerous variables involved, including the relationship between melting sea ice and methane release.
Reversing ocean warming will be incredibly challenging, and there is no quick solution. It can only begin by reducing carbon emissions to slow the melting of sea ice and, thus, tamper with the speed at which ocean temperatures are warming.
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