Hilda is “barely holding on” to tropical storm status as it moves south of the Big Island, says KITV as of 6:45 a.m. Thursday. At present, rains could still soak Hawaii County.
Hawaii, it seems, has survived yet another hurricane scare. But don’t get complacent: More storms are likely headed our way.
That’s according to the AccuWeather Global Weather Center, which warns, “While the impact from Hilda on Hawaii will be minimal, a strengthening El Niño will continue the potential for tropical systems tracking near Hawaii well into the fall.”
Consider this:
El Niño is attributed to warmer-than-average waters of the tropical Pacific Ocean. When waters are warm, there is potential for stronger and greater numbers of tropical systems.
On average, four to five tropical systems affect the Central Pacific basin each year and most originate from the Eastern Pacific. So far, there have been five named systems in the Central Pacific during 2015.
AccuWeather
Hurricane Iniki — the strongest tropical system to ever strike Hawaii and a 100-year storm — occurred in September and moved up from the South. It arrived at the end of the 1991-1992 El Niño.
Hurricane Iwa formed in late November of 1982, and it tracked from southwest to northeast, farther west than Iniki. A significant El Niño occurred during 1982-1983.
Hurricane Nina, for those who remember, occurred during the El Niño of 1957-58 during late November into December.
Bottom line: Stay prepared with enough water, nonperishable food, batteries for a radio and flashlights and other necessities to last you and yours over several days.
AccuWeather
GET IN-DEPTH
REPORTING ON HAWAII’S BIGGEST ISSUES
16 years ago, Civil Beat did not exist.
Civil Beat exists today because thousands of readers like you read, shared and donated to keep our stories free and accessible to all. Now we need your support to continue this critical work.
Give now and support our spring campaign to raise $100,000 from 250+ donors by May 15. Mahalo for making this work possible!
About the Author
-
Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on X at @chadblairCB.