Experts predicted way more hurricanes this year — here's the weird reason we're 'missing' storms

Here's one reason why the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season has had such few storms.

hurricane approaching the American continent visible above the Earth, a view from the satellite.
The 2024 Atlantic hurricane season has had fewer hurricanes than expected.
(Image credit: MikeMareen/Getty Images)

Back in April and May 2024, various universities and weather agencies predicted there would be more hurricanes in the Atlantic than usual this year. Warm seas meant conditions were perfect for a particularly active season, they said, with somewhere between 15 and 25 named storms.

Yet by mid-September, the typical peak of the hurricane season, only seven storms have been named. Where are the "missing" hurricanes in the Caribbean? To understand what happened, and why the models seemingly got it so wrong, we can't look at the Atlantic in isolation. The key difference this year was unprecedented rain in an unexpected place: the Sahara desert.

Francesca Morris
Postdoctoral Researcher in Convective-Scale Modelling, University of Oxford