Now a Category 2 Storm, Epsilon Is This Season’s 10th Hurricane

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The National Hurricane Center upgraded Hurricane Epsilon to a Category 2 storm Wednesday afternoon, noting that it was rapidly intensifying as it approached Bermuda.

Epsilon is now the 10th hurricane of an intense and active Atlantic storm season that still has more than a month to go.

Epsilon is moving northwestward over the central Atlantic at 9 mph, according the center’s 2 p.m. Eastern advisory, with maximum sustained winds of 110 mph and higher gusts.

It was about 365 miles east-southeast of Bermuda, where a tropical storm warning was in effect.

The storm was expected to turn toward the north-northwest Thursday and was forecast to make its closest approach to Bermuda that night, the center said. It could also strengthen over the next day or two. The storm is not currently expected to make landfall in the United States.

Epsilon is also forecast to create large swells that could affect Bermuda for the next several days, the center said, and they are likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip-current conditions.

Hurricane Paulette was one of the most recent storms to affect Bermuda, knocking down power lines but causing only minimal property damage when it made landfall there Sept. 14. The storm hovered over the island longer than the Bermuda Weather Service had predicted. Hurricane Teddy passed to the east of the island Sept. 21, triggering tropical storm conditions in Bermuda.

This year’s Atlantic hurricane season is one of the most active on record, meteorologists said. So far, there have been 26 named storms, of which 10 were hurricanes. It’s near the 2005 record of 27 named storms, 14 of which were hurricanes, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Since the satellite era began in 1966, there have been only four years — 1969, 1995, 2005 and 2017 — with more than 10 hurricanes by Oct. 20, according to Philip Klotzbach, a meteorologist at Colorado State University.

Dennis Feltgen, a spokesman and meteorologist with the National Hurricane Center in Miami, has called the 2020 hurricane season “hyperactive” compared with the average hurricane season, which typically produces 12 named storms, including three that develop into major hurricanes.

“This is a large storm,” Feltgen said, noting that Epsilon was expected to come close enough to Bermuda to cause tropical storm conditions on the archipelago. New data from a U.S. Air Force weather plane had picked up winds strengthening to 110 mph, he said, but Bermuda still “is not expected to get the core of the hurricane.”

“It’s worth noting that Epsilon could still strengthen into a major hurricane,” Feltgen said. “It may not be done yet.”

In May, NOAA predicted an above-normal season in the Atlantic, but in August, government scientists updated their outlook.

In recent decades, scientists have seen increased hurricane activity in the North Atlantic, by a measure that combines intensity with characteristics like duration and frequency of storms. Climate scientists say there are links between global warming and at least the intensity of hurricanes. As ocean temperatures rise, hurricanes grow stronger as warm water serves as the fuel that powers them.

The previous hurricane, Delta, brought floods and destruction to an already battered Louisiana. The storm made landfall some 20 miles from where an earlier hurricane, Laura, touched down weeks earlier, intensifying the devastation the state had experienced during a brutal hurricane season.