Hurricane Erin, Atlantic and Tropical wave
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Hurricane Erin, the first of the 2025 Atlantic season, is forecast to become a major storm this weekend, bringing heavy rain, flooding risk, and dangerous surf to parts of the Caribbean and western Atlantic.
Erin is now a post-tropical cyclone as it moves further away from the United States, so we now turn our attention to two other areas of possible development.
The NHC is tracking two tropical waves across the Atlantic, each with the potential to develop into tropical cyclones in the coming days.
Tropical Storm Erin is approaching Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, bringing heavy rains that could cause flooding and landslides
The system, located about 250 miles northeast of the Leeward Islands, is continuing to organize in favorable conditions. The NHC assigns it an 80 percent chance of development within 48 hours and a 90 percent chance within seven days, with a tropical storm likely to form as it tracks northwest then north over the southwestern Atlantic.
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Residents of the northern Leeward Islands are monitoring the passage of Tropical Storm Erin, which formed Monday west of the Cabo Verde Islands and could strengthen to become the Atlantic’s first hurricane of the 2025 season.
Tropical Storm Erin is gaining strength in the central Atlantic and could become the first hurricane of the 2025 Atlantic season by Thursday, according to the National Hurricane Center. At 11 AM AST (1500 UTC) on Tuesday,
Forecasters are warning swimmers early Friday that U.S. East Coast beaches will remain dangerous for the coming days, as Hurricane Erin continues its northeasterly flight from the United States.