What will the hurricanes of the 2023 Atlantic season be named? Here's the list.
Will Arlene, Gert or Whitney be brewing in our future?
They are among the storm names you could hear now that the six-month-long Atlantic hurricane season has begun.
The season officially began June 1, and forecasters, in general, predict a near- to slightly below-average year. This is in part because of the influence of an expected El Niño, which tends to reduce Atlantic hurricane activity.
A typical year averages about 14 tropical storms, seven of which spin into hurricanes, based on weather records that date from 1991 to 2020.
A tropical storm gets a name when its sustained winds reach 39 mph; it becomes a hurricane when its winds reach 74 mph.
The World Meteorological Organization, based in Geneva, chooses hurricane names several years in advance, based on a strict criteria. If a hurricane is particularly deadly or costly, its name is "retired" by the WMO and replaced by another one.
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Here is the list of names for the 2023 Atlantic hurricane season:
Arlene
Bret
Cindy
Don
Emily
Franklin
Gert
Harold
Idalia
Jose
Katia
Lee
Margot
Nigel
Ophelia
Philippe
Rina
Sean
Tammy
Vince
Whitney
If all 21 names are used this year, there is a supplemental list of 21 names that will be used after Whitney. Here is that list, from the WMO:
Adria
Braylen
Caridad
Deshawn
Emery
Foster
Gemma
Heath
Isla
Jacobus
Kenzie
Lucio
Makayla
Nolan
Orlanda
Pax
Ronin
Sophie
Tayshaun
Viviana
Will
Before 2021, the Greek alphabet was used if the primary list was exhausted, using such names as Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta and beyond. But that naming system has been discontinued, partly because of confusion over the Greek alphabet.
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Why – and how – do hurricanes get names?
Before they started naming storms, hurricane forecasters had to refer to storms by saying something like "the storm 500 miles east-southeast of Miami." But six hours later, the storm's position would change.
Also, when more than one storm was going on at the same time, making it clear which storm was being described made the job even harder.
In 1953, the U.S. began using female names for hurricanes. By 1979, male and female names were being used. The names alternate between male and female.
Here's how to pronounce all of the 2023 hurricane names.
The names are in alphabetical order, and each new storm gets the next name on the list.
There are no Q, U, X, Y or Z names because of the lack of usable names that begin with those letters.
Retired hurricane names: Ian, Fiona retired from list of hurricane names because of 2022 death and destruction
Eastern Pacific hurricane names
There is a separate list for tropical storms and hurricanes that form in the eastern Pacific Ocean:
Adrian
Beatriz
Calvin
Dora
Eugene
Fernanda
Greg
Hilary
Irwin
Jova
Kenneth
Lidia
Max
Norma
Otis
Pilar
Ramon
Selma
Todd
Veronica
Wiley
Xina
York
Zelda
Eastern Pacific hurricanes seldom have any direct impact on the U.S., though they can batter the west coast of Mexico. The eastern Pacific season began on May 15, more than two weeks earlier than the Atlantic season.
There is a separate list of names for Central Pacific hurricanes, which can occasionally hit Hawaii. In addition, there are separate lists for typhoons in the western Pacific and tropical cyclones in Australia and the Indian Ocean.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Hurricane season 2023 names list, from Arlene to Whitney