Why does it seem like the โIโ storms are always the worst hurricanes, present the most historic damage and yield the most retired names?
Itโs complicated, and there are competing schools of thought.
First, itโs important to understand that the World Meteorological Organization has an international committee to govern this process under a strict procedure.
The basic principle to assess a nameโs retirement is if the storm was โso deadly or costly that the future use of its name on a different storm would be inappropriate for obvious reasons of sensitivity.โ
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So, back to the question, what is it with the โIโ name?
The โIโ name falls in the ninth position on the WMOโs list of storm names for the Atlantic basin, no matter the year.
These storms, simply based on climatology, will, generally, develop at a time in the season when conditions are prime.
U.S. & World
Now, โprimeโ conditions certainly represent a broad assumption, but let me frame it in the context that an average season in the Atlantic Basin has 14 named storms.
Continuing, on average, the fifth named storm forms in mid-to-late August, the seventh around the first of September and the ninth? It will have usually formed by the 16th of September.
Still, no season is the same and storm development doesnโt often occur on a smooth curve.
In fact, in the Atlantic Basin, much of our activity is โbackloadedโ to the period between mid-August to early November.
But if the peak of the season occurs around September 10th and the โIโ name is the ninth name used, this lines up, right?
In essence, conditions are typically prime for hurricane development when โIโ is reached on the list of storms.
Seems to makes sense as a quick explanation.
But is that the actual reason?
Brian McNoldy, a senior hurricane research associate at the University of Miami, addressed this in a recent blog post.
He found that itโs far, far simpler explanation.
The reason โIโ names are the most frequently retired is (mostly) just luck.
Yes, just luck.
He states that, โIf it was related to the time of year then โHโ and โJโ storms should be pretty high, too.โ
Since 1953, six โHโ storms and five โJโ storms have been retired.
Blazing past them is โFโ with 10 retirements in the last several decades.
McNoldy notes that, of the 13 โIโ storms that have been retired over the last 70 years, seven of them have been retired in the last 14 years.
Yep, more than half since 2008.
I hypothesize that another likely reason Florida residents have bad reactions to any โIโ storm can be traced back to their experiences.
If youโre a long time local or recent relocator, perhaps youโve tangoed with some infamous โIโ storms yourself.
While Idalia is on the map today, it wasnโt so long ago that we were shaken by Ian (2022), Irma (2017) and Ivan (2004).
While โIโ has proven to be a curse to Florida over the last several years, itโs just our bad luck.