Hurricane

Forecasters start hurricane season watching a storm with ‘high’ chance of development

UPDATE 6/2/2020: The tropical depression is continuing to bring life-threatening heavy rainfall & flooding over portions of Mexico & Central America. The system is forecast to strengthen into Tropical Storm Cristobal later Tuesday, according to the National Hurricane Center.

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Monday marks the first official day of the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season, and forecasters are already monitoring a disturbance in the Gulf of Mexico that has a high chance of becoming a tropical depression and possibly Tropical Storm Cristobal.

The “large” disturbance is near the west coast of the Yucatan peninsula of Mexico and is remnants of former Eastern Pacific Tropical Storm Amanda, according to the National Hurricane Center in West Miami-Dade.

Forecasters say the system “is gradually becoming better organized” and has a 90 percent chance of forming into a new tropical depression and possibly into Tropical Storm Cristobal in the next two to five days. The system is currently not a threat to Florida.

The disturbance is forecast to move west-northwestward over the Bay of Campeche later Monday, when environmental conditions are expected to be “conducive to support development” and a new tropical depression is likely to form by the end of Tuesday.

The system is then forecast to drift west or west-southwest over the southern Bay of Campeche through the middle of the week. Those along the coast of the Bay of Campeche should monitor this system as tropical storm watches or warnings could be required by Monday night, according to the hurricane center.

Regardless if it forms into a tropical cyclone, heavy rainfall is expected to continue over portions of southern Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Belize, and western Honduras during the next few days, according to the National Hurricane Center.

While Monday marks the first day of the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season, two tropical storms, Arthur and Bertha, already formed in May, making this the sixth straight season during which a named storm has formed before June 1. Neither storm affected Florida, although Arthur, which formed off the east Florida coast, did bring wet and stormy weekend weather to the state’s east coast.

This story was originally published June 1, 2020 at 8:38 AM.

Michelle Marchante
Miami Herald
Michelle Marchante covers the pulse of healthcare in South Florida and also the City of Coral Gables. Before that, she covered the COVID-19 pandemic, hurricanes, crime, education, entertainment and other topics in South Florida for the Herald as a breaking news reporter. She recently won first place in the health reporting category in the 2025 Sunshine State Awards for her coverage of Steward Health’s bankruptcy. An investigative series about the abrupt closure of a Miami heart transplant program led Michelle and her colleagues to be recognized as finalists in two 2024 Florida Sunshine State Award categories. She also won second place in the 73rd annual Green Eyeshade Awards for her consumer-focused healthcare stories and was part of the team of reporters who won a 2022 Pulitzer Prize for the Miami Herald’s breaking news coverage of the Surfside building collapse. Michelle graduated with honors from Florida International University and was a 2025 National Press Foundation Covering Workplace Mental Health fellow and a 2020-2021 Poynter-Koch Media & Journalism fellow.  Support my work with a digital subscription
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