Active 2014 Hurricane Landfall Season Predicted: by Company with Best Predictions Record Past 5 Years
Ocala, FL (PRWEB) May 29, 2014 -- Global Weather Oscillations Inc. GWO), stresses that we should not be complacent following the historically weak 2013 hurricane season. CEO David Dilley says the hurricane season of 2014 will likely be a dangerous year for the United States, with around 5 named storms expected to influence coastal areas, a minimum of 2 hurricane landfalls, and Florida has a 75 percent chance it will likely break out of a long 8 year period of no hurricane landfalls.
Mr. Dilley says that GWO is the only organization that correctly predicted the weak 2013 season and active 2012 season, and that GWO is sticking to its original predictions issued in December calling for an active hurricane and tropical storm landfall season for the 2014 Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico hurricane season.
Mr. Dilley says the upcoming season will be stronger and more dangerous than last year, an about face from 2013 which saw the development and strength of tropical storm and hurricane activity suppressed by hostile upper atmospheric wind shear. Most organizations are calling for a similar year again, with El Niño wind shear causing another weak hurricane season. But Dilley says there may not even be an El Niño this summer, or only a weak one at the very best. In either case the strong Natural Climate Pulse Cycle that controls hurricane landfalls will override the potential El Niño.
GWO makes specific predictions for 11 United States coastal zones from New England to Texas, and the Philippine Islands in the western Pacific. Prediction Zones assigned a high probability risk for a hurricane are termed “Hot Spots” for that year; GWO’s red-flag hot spot predictions for the United States have been nearly 90 percent accurate since 2006, and instrumental for long-range planning by insurance companies and other organizations.
Mr. Dilley says that what makes GWO a standout from other organizations is their commitment to research and development of GWO’s Climate Pulse Technology (CPT) that incorporates climate cycle mechanisms that control the rhythm of weather cycles. Research over the past 25 years has found that each of the Atlantic and Gulf coastal zones have varying weather cycles, and within each cycle, there exists smaller weather cycles which make each zone unique. Once all of the cycles are discovered, Dilley then uses the Climate Pulse Technology to accurately assess the intensity of a future hurricane season, and the probability risk for hurricane or tropical storm conditions within a prediction zone for that year.
GWO’s recent CPT model successes include the very weak 2013 hurricane season, hot spot zone predictions of Hurricane Ike (2008), Irene (2011), and Sandy (2012). The prediction of Sandy, a high-impact hybrid storm was made 3 years in advance, and Irene 2 years in advance. Mr. Dilley is confident about his 2014 prediction calling for an active season (17 named storms, 8 hurricanes, 3 major hurricanes). The last major hurricane to strike the U.S. was in 2005 (Wilma), but that could change in 2014.
David Dilley, a former NOAA meteorologist formed Global Weather Oscillations Inc. (GWO) in 1992 with the specific understanding that weather and climate occurs in cycles. While mankind is playing some role in climate change, Mr. Dilley believes most climate changes are primarily attributable to natural climate cycles caused by the Earth’s Natural Climate Pulse. He disputes the notion that hurricanes occur randomly and are impossible to predict. He states “There are no random hurricanes or typhoons, everything occurs in cycles.”
Hurricane zone predictions and additional information can be acquired through the GWO web site http://www.GlobalWeatherOscillations.com which is open to the public and includes the 2014 predictions, El Niño predictions, past hurricane season verification, graphics, and the climate change e-book “Earth’s Natural Climate Pulse”, authored by David Dilley.
In addition, an interactive electronic subscription to the GWO’s hurricane predictions can also be acquired through GWO’s working partner, XtremeGIS http://www.xtremegis.com the risk management division of Wall Street Network (WSN) http://www.wsn.net.
David Dilley, Global Weather Oscillations Inc., http://www.GlobalWeatherOscillations.com, +1 (352) 732-8170, [email protected]
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