While Saharan dust clouds have contributed to dry and stable air just above the surface, the circulation from the Northeast Atlantic over the cold Canary Current has penetrated even more dry air deep into the tropics. We haven't seen this in 50 years.
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) September 2, 2024
Reminder the lack of hurricanes is not entirely inconsistent with climate change predictions.
We will see fewer hurricanes, but the ones that do develop will be climate fueled and reach Category 6+
Right now, the oceans up to the lower stratosphere are overheating — too hot.
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) September 2, 2024
Strong hurricanes? Global warming
Weak hurricanes? Global warming
No hurricanes? Global warming
Hot today? Global warming
Cold today? Global warming
Raining too much? Global warming
Drought? Global warming
Strong hurricanes? Global warming
Weak hurricanes? Global warming
No hurricanes? Global warming
Hot today? Global warming
Cold today? Global warming
Raining too much? Global warming
Drought? Global warming
— Some guy from TN (@SomeguyfromTN) September 2, 2024
The Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea are hot, yet hurricane season has entered a lull just days before its peak. Earlier this year, climate alarmists warned about elevated tropical activity due to ‘climate change,’ but their forecast has proven incorrect.
www.zerohedge.com/weather/atlantic-tropics-are-completely-broken
h/t DOORBERT