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Tropical Storm Bret forms, forecast to become hurricane near Caribbean

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Boosted by record-warm waters, the storm is the earliest on record to form so far east. Puerto Rico could be affected this weekend.
The National Hurricane Center declared Tropical Storm Bret formed at 5 p.m. Monday, the second of the young Atlantic season. Located about halfway between the coast of Africa and the eastern Caribbean Sea, the system is likely to intensify, and it could approach or impact the Lesser Antilles as a hurricane by the weekend.
Bret is predicted to “move across the Lesser Antilles as a hurricane on Thursday and Friday, bringing a risk of flooding from heavy rainfall, hurricane-force winds, and dangerous storm surge and waves,” the National Hurricane Center said.
It added, “Everyone in the Lesser Antilles, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands should closely monitor updates.” The Lesser Antilles includes the islands of Trinidad and Tobago, Barbados, Saint Lucia, and Grenada, among others.
For a storm to develop where Bret did during June is historic. In fact, it formed farther east than any tropical storm on record this early in the year. It also became one of the earliest named storms on record in the Atlantic’s Main Development Region. The MDR is the region between the Caribbean and Cabo Verde where long-lived, intense storms can grow out of disturbances rolling off the coast of Africa. Usually, storms don’t form in the MDR until around August.
While atmospheric chaos plants the seeds of storm growth, record-warm ocean temperatures over the Atlantic have created an environment ripe for this system’s intensification. Ocean temperatures around the world are at record-high levels, with human-caused climate change the driver of a long-term warming trend. The waters in the Atlantic are as warm as they would typically be at the peak of hurricane season two to three months from now.

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