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Hurricane Predictors Admit They Can’t Predict — Quitting Because It Doesn’t Work


Two top U.S. hurricane forecasters, famous across Deep South hurricane country, are quitting the practice of making a seasonal forecast in December because it doesn’t work.

William Gray and Phil Klotzbach say a look back shows their past 20 years of forecasts had no predictive value.

The two scientists from Colorado State University will still discuss different probabilities of hurricane seasons in December. But the shift signals how far humans are, even with supercomputers, from truly knowing what our weather will do in the long run.

Colorado State has been known for decades for forecasts of how many named storms and hurricanes can be expected each official hurricane season (which runs from June to November.)

Last week, the pair made this announcement:

“We are discontinuing our early December quantitative hurricane forecast for the next year … Our early December Atlantic basin seasonal hurricane forecasts of the last 20 years have not shown real-time forecast skill even though the hindcast studies on which they were based had considerable skill.”

The two will still make the traditional forecasts closer to hurricane season.

An earlier version of this story incorrectly said they were stopping all forecasts.

(Source: The Ottawa Citizen)



5 Responses

  1. But their department claims they can protect the weather for decades and even centuries in advance (that’s why they want to impose considereable burderns on the taxpayers in order to fight the purported global warming). Afterall, after Katrina, six years ago, they predicted the next few years would be full of increasingly powerful hurricanes causing massive loss of property and life, unless we stopped producing so much carbon….

  2. How come nobody commented “if they can’t predicted the weather how can they say what happened a billion years ago”? Nu – there’s gotta be a few geniuses out there.

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