As of today, October 24th, it has been 3652 days (including leap years) or a decade (10 years) since the US has been hit by a Category 3 or greater hurricane.
The last such hurricane was Wilma on October 24th, 2005. Hurricane Wilma was the most intense tropical cyclone ever recorded in the Atlantic basin. Each day forward will be a new record in this decade long hurricane drought period.
![679px-Wilma_2005_track[1]](https://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2015/10/679px-wilma_2005_track1.png?resize=679%2C599&quality=75)
Part of the record breaking 2005 Atlantic hurricane season, which included three of the six most intense Atlantic hurricanes ever (along with #4 Rita and #6 Katrina), Wilma was the twenty-second storm, thirteenth hurricane, sixth major hurricane, fourth Category 5 hurricane, and second-most destructive hurricane of the 2005 season. A tropical depression formed in the Caribbean Sea near Jamaica on October 15, and intensified into a tropical storm two days later, which was named Wilma. After heading westward as a tropical depression, Wilma turned abruptly southward after becoming a tropical storm. Wilma continued intensifying, and eventually became a hurricane on October 18. Shortly thereafter, rapid intensification occurred, and in only 24 hours, Wilma became a Category 5 hurricane with winds of 185 mph (295 km/h).
Intensity slowly leveled off after becoming a Category 5 hurricane, and winds had decreased to 150 mph (240 km/h) before reaching the Yucatán Peninsula on October 20 and 21. After crossing the Yucatán Peninsula, Wilma emerged into the Gulf of Mexico as a Category 2 hurricane. As Wilma began accelerating to the northeast, gradual re-intensification occurred, and the hurricane became a Category 3 hurricane on October 24. Shortly thereafter, Wilma made landfall in Cape Romano, Floridawith winds of 120 mph (190 km/h). As Wilma was crossing Florida, it had briefly weakened back to a Category 2 hurricane, but again re-intensified as it reached the Atlantic Ocean. The hurricane intensified into a Category 3 hurricane for the final occasion, but Wilma dropped below that intensity while accelerating northeastward. By October 26, Wilma transitioned into an extratropical cyclone southeast of Nova Scotia.

But, to listen to Al Gore and the media, you’d think global warming has made more hurricanes hit the U.S. since then. In fact, there has been no Category three or stronger hurricane that has made U.S. landfall in a decade.
Dr. Roger Pielke Jr. wrote on his blog:
Above are some graphs for those of you interested in the remarkable, ongoing drought in intense hurricane landfalls in the US, which is stretching close to 10 years. The top graph shows the days in between intense (category 3+) landfalls in the US since 1900. The bottom graph shows the same information, but only for Florida landfalls.
You can see that for the US, the current “intense hurricane drought” is unprecedented in at least a century. For Florida, there have been other long stretches between intense hurricane landfalls. Over the past century the average time between intense landfalls in Florida has just about doubled, from about 3 years to 6 years.
Data, sources, discussion: Pielke (2014)

Note: the graphs have been updated by WUWT to reflect current date and values since Pielke wrote his analysis.
CommonDreams.org quoted Al Gore back in 2005:
… the science is extremely clear now, that warmer oceans make the average hurricane stronger, not only makes the winds stronger, but dramatically increases the moisture from the oceans evaporating into the storm – thus magnifying its destructive power – makes the duration, as well as the intensity of the hurricane, stronger.
Last year we had a lot of hurricanes. Last year, Japan set an all-time record for typhoons: ten, the previous record was seven. Last year the science textbooks had to be re-written. They said, “It’s impossible to have a hurricane in the south Atlantic.” We had the first one last year, in Brazil. We had an all-time record last year for tornadoes in the United States, 1,717 – largely because hurricanes spawned tornadoes.
Well, tornadoes aren’t doing any better, as these graphs from the Storm Prediction Center show. Eight of the last eleven years have been below average:
And 2015 threatens to tie the record low year of 1954 for U.S. Tornadooes:
Back to the hurricane drought, the mighty media was quoting the mighty scientists, and they have fallen flat on their face. Here’s a collection of failed predictions in the wake of Hurricane Katrina:
In 2006, CBS’s Hannah Storm Claims Katrina-like Storms Will Happen ‘All Along Our Atlantic and Gulf Coastlines.’ Just five days before Hurricane Katrina’s one year anniversary, CBS news anchor Hannah Storm featured climate alarmist Mike Tidwell on The Early Show to discuss his book, “The Ravaging Tide.” “I think the biggest lesson from Katrina a year later is that those same ingredients, you know, a city below sea level hit by a major hurricane, will be replicated by global warming all along our Atlantic and Gulf Coast lines,” Tidwell said on August 24, 2006. Tidwell then went on to claim that cities all along the coast would be underwater due to increased hurricane activity and intensity “unless we stop global warming.” In a 2009 Washington Post op-ed, Tidwell explained just how far he thought people should go to “stop global warming.” After comparing the current global warming problem to the civil rights movement of the 1960s, he insisted that “After years of delay and denial and green half-measures, we must legislate a stop to the burning of coal, oil and natural gas.”
‘No End In Sight’ For Big Hurricanes, CBS Says Less than a month after Katrina made landfall, CBS anchor Russ Mitchell predicted that there would be “continued high levels of hurricane activity and high levels of hurricane landfalls for the next decade or perhaps even longer.” “For years now, experts have been saying we’ve entered a period of increased hurricane activity that may last a long time.” Mitchell said on the Sept. 22, 2005 Early Show. Later in the broadcast he added, “since 1990, the number of big hurricanes in the Gulf is up again, and there’s no end in sight.” Now, a decade later that prediction looks laughable since there hasn’t been a major hurricane (Category 3 or higher) to make landfall since October of 2005, when Hurricane Wilma struck Florida.
NBC Blames Global Warming for Stronger Hurricanes, Says It’s ‘A Trend That’s Likely To Continue’ In the weeks following Katrina, NBC turned to global warming as the hurricane’s cause. On September 18, 2005, Nightly News anchor John Seigenthaler said, “scientists studying the earth’s climate say we are experiencing stronger hurricanes in this century, a trend that’s likely to continue.” NBC’s chief science correspondent Robert Bazell continued, asking: “Was Katrina a warning of more terrible hurricanes in the next few years?” Bazell admitted “one storm cannot prove anything about climate change,” but claimed the projected ocean temperature rise would cause more severe storms through the end of the century. That NBC report included climatologist Stephen Schneider who said, “humans won’t make the storms, but we can make them a little stronger than they otherwise would have been.”
From Newsbusters:
Looking back, it’s easy to see how wrong the networks were.
In 2008, The National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) responded to climate change assumptions about hurricanes saying, “There is nothing in the U.S. hurricane damage record that indicates global warming has caused a significant increase in destruction along our coasts.” As the years passed, the more obvious it was that fewer major hurricanes were hitting land. In April 2015, the American Geophysical Union reported that the United States has been in a nine year Atlantic hurricane landfall drought. A record low. AGU said, “Such a remarkable ‘hurricane drought’ has never been seen before – since records began in 1851 … the last major hurricane – of Category 3 or higher – to make landfall in the U.S. was Hurricane Wilma in 2005.” Research by meteorologists Anthony Watts and Ryan Maue, and environmental studies professor Roger Pielke, Jr. showed the same hurricane drought and an overall slump in tropical cyclone activity throughout the world. Chris Landsea, who is the Science and Operations Officer for the National Hurricane Center at NOAA, tweeted skeptically about a hurricane/climate change link in May 201
How long will it be before the media stops pushing the meme of “more hurricanes due to global warming”? Perhaps never, because as we all know the news cycle maxim: “if it bleeds, it leads”
Note: shortly after publication, the first paragraph was updated to mention leap years
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I remember Al Gore’s book, “Earth in the Balance”, in 1992, which was deploring and seems he has nothing learned since than. I am no fan of Gore’s either. Actually, I think he is no fan of the climate, he just wants votes. And this makes me really angry, because he is wasting so many people’s money and time. On the other hand, since we are on a hurricane topic, I wonder why doesn’t anyone speaks about what happened in California, in September 1939: there were four storms, heat wave, heavy rain and…. the only tropical storm to make landfall in California in the twentieth century. A serious El Niño event was active then! I think that this is an issue that was not investigated enough, I only found some answers on the Internet here (http://www.ocean-climate-law.com/13/home.html.), but I am willing to know more….
Speaking of hyperbole, what ever became of the “Godzilla El Nino”?
I think they had Michael Mann taking the readings of that hurricane !!!
Let’s compare the damage from Hurricane Andrew (1992) to Patricia at landfall. I would guess that the winds around the eye were much stronger when the eye-wall made landfall south of Miami than at landfall of Hurricane Patricia. Take a look at some of the damage:
https://www.google.com.mx/search?q=Homestead+FL+Damage&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0CAcQ_AUoAWoVChMIwKvs-Z_cyAIVhjgmCh0MRw_B&biw=1366&bih=610#imgrc=Y0yhRaH–sWYMM%3A
and:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurricane_Andrew
Not the strength at 50 miles offshore, but the strength at actual landfall I believe was greater.
and:
Joe Bastardi reported that Patricia was at 878 mb 50-60 miles offshore and at landfall was at 925 mb…
Somebody was lying !!!!
Thanks, Anthony. Very good post.
“How long will it be before the media stops pushing the meme of “more hurricanes due to global warming”?”
The answer to that is “flying in the wind”, but it would take some serious cooling of the USA and Europe. A cold North Atlantic.
It looks as if Mexico might have been spared by Hurricane Patricia, but not the U.S.:
From the WUnderground blog new section:
“While Patricia’s wind circulation did not survive the journey across Mexico’s mountains, some of its moisture has. Water vapor imagery Saturday night showed a large plume of tropical moisture feeding northward into eastern Texas.
This will add to an already dangerous flooding situation unfolding across the eastern half of Texas, later shifting east through the Gulf Coast states into early in the upcoming week.”
The adverse effect of hurricanes on the U.S. over the last 10 years would seem to be greater than Anthony and his followers suppose.
Adverse? Surely you are aware that hurricane and related cyclonic patterns are responsible for a great deal of essential moisture in North America? Without them there would be an immense desert.
Wow, over a hundred comments. The skeptics jumped on how it fizzed out or mocked how the warmistas spun it’s power.
WUWTs a well visited source of thought provoking counters to the warmistas ruse. It serves a pivotal role as does a few others such as Novas in Aussieland.
Often, what conmen do is keep you busy while they wiggle in while your distracted. Here’s a link to a very active behind the scenes NGO. If Greenpece and Sierra are at the top of the triangle, this one would be a few levels below. They are an originator and compiler of messages to the story.
http://www.climatecentral.org
This group is even deeper into the triangle and primarily works the regulatory side.
http://environmentalintegrity.org
If you were filling out your triangle levels, this group would be above the first two I link to and below the big boys.
http://earthjustice.org
They are affectionately called NGOs, but are functionally no different than the concept of a special interest group. Of course, by the time “news” or the topic of the day makes it to the masses, it’s often been initiated and/or promoted by these groups.
This strategic use of NGOs has explodded over the past 10 years and esp the past 5.
Warming, you’ll fume while you read some of this stuff, but I promise it’s worth knowing at least a few more than the big boys.
Ugh, sorry about the typos. Unacceptable. Will do better.
Looks like the whole system is going east of Texas. Perhaps it will end up as a “nor’easter” …
No trends in tropical cyclone activity in the North Atlantic and Western Pacific basins.
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2630932
Focusing on hurricanes that make landfall in the US or Florida is just another example of cherry picking.
When you look at the global data, the proportion of category 4 and 5 hurricanes is increasing strongly in 4 of the 6 ocean basins and steady or increasing slightly in the other two (P < 0.01).
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/S00382-013-1713-0/fulltext.html
BS
http://models.weatherbell.com/tropical.php
You didn’t address the point of the paper. The proportion of hurricanes that are reaching category 4 and 5 has been increasing over the past 4 decades.
1974 and 1977 look to be historical low years for major hurricanes and from either of those years to 2015, I see an uptrend. If I start from 1980, the trend looks to be flat.
Last year Global ACE was below average. This year is above average but the increase can be attributed to the Central/Eastern North Pacific Basin which is now more than 200% above average.
The 2 most recent E NPac hurricanes Olaf/Patricia @ur momisugly combined 55 ACE were 25% of the previous 221 ACE for C/E NPac 2015 before their arrival.
i’ts logical that you see an uptick in the major hurricane trend around the nineties. when you dig a bit in the NASA explenation you will find the why: better measurement techniques and better sattelites. El nino causes usually low wind shear area’s in the pacific: ideal conditions for major hurricanes.
However the atlantic also broke another record: the longest stretch of time without a category 5 hurricane.
Wind farms are saving us from hurricanes and tornadoes. But they are causing drought.
Are you skeptical of meteorology?
Government Tornado Researchers: what they don’t want you to know about what they don’t know
http://wp.me/p4JijN-78
Why Wind Farms Cause Drought
http://wp.me/p4JijN-1RV
I was in south Texas during hurricane dolly in ’08. It was anything but insignificant.