System continues to move across Florida toward Gulf
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Florida, Invest 93L
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There’s growing concern for another significant rain and flooding event this week, this time along the Gulf Coast, from what could become the Atlantic basin’s next tropical system. The potential storm’s flood threat is just the latest in what has been a summer full of deadly and devastating floods.
The National Hurricane Center said Tuesday a system off Florida’s Atlantic coast remains disorganized, but could develop into the season’s next tropical depression or storm after it
A tropical low-pressure system is expected to bring rain and storms to Jacksonville and surrounding areas this afternoon as The Weather Authority tracks its path across Florida and into the Gulf.
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The St. Lucie News-Tribune on MSNNational Hurricane Center tracking Florida disturbance. Will it impact the Treasure Coast?National Hurricane Center is tracking a disturbance expected to bring heavy rain and thunderstorms to the Treasure Coast this week.
L is looking better organized Tuesday morning and will move over Central Florida throughout the day. This will bring multiple rounds of rain and storms with up to 3 inches of rain possible in some areas.
"Should development take place on the Atlantic side of Florida, it may once again drift northward toward the U.S. coast," Accuweather said on July 11. The more plausible option is development on the Gulf side, which could be steered westward along the northern Gulf Coast, the weather forecast company stated.
The National Hurricane Center on Monday increased its forecast chances a system already dumping rain on Florida could develop into the season’s next tropical depression or storm.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis says he has “requested from the federal government a major disaster declaration" for 25 counties in Florida following Hurricane Idalia.
Insured losses from US hurricanes could rise by nearly 50 per cent under a 2C global-warming scenario, according to new research from reinsurer MS Amlin. The peer-reviewed study published in the
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Tampa Free Press on MSNFlorida Braces As Tropical Moisture Surge Expected To Bring Widespread Rain, Flood RiskGet ready to trade your sunshine for showers as a significant shift in the weather pattern promises a much wetter outlook for the Sunshine State, with forecasters closely watching a developing system in the Gulf.