Hurricane

Tropical Storm Claudette is back over water, and there’s another Atlantic disturbance

Tropical Storm Claudette is in the Atlantic Ocean, leaving flooding and rain over the Carolinas as it rapidly continues northeast.

The National Hurricane Center said the storm will likely peter out in the next 24 hours.

The remnants of Claudette, the third named storm of the season, are moving east-northeast at 29 mph with maximum sustained winds at 45 mph with higher gusts, according to the 11 p.m. advisory. Tropical-storm-force winds extend up to 175 miles from the center.

The forecast shows the storm becoming a post-tropical cyclone and dissipating Tuesday, just south of Nova Scotia. The hurricane center said the 11 p.m. update would be the last for Claudette.

The storm made landfall in Louisiana on Saturday and drenched several states over the weekend, including Alabama and the Florida Panhandle. At least 13 people were killed in Alabama when the system was a tropical depression, including eight children in a van from a youth home for abused or neglected kids, and a man with a baby in another vehicle, according to The Associated Press.

The National Hurricane Center is tracking a tropical storm and disturbance with a 30% chance of formation in the next 48 hours.
The National Hurricane Center is tracking a tropical storm and disturbance with a 30% chance of formation in the next 48 hours. NHC

Forecasters are also monitoring a “well-defined” tropical wave that was about 700 miles east of the Windward Islands Monday evening and is expected to move west at 15 to 20 mph.

The disturbance was producing thunderstorms in the area and had a 30% chance of formation through the next five days as of the 8 p.m. update. The hurricane center says it will meet upper-level winds Thursday, which should make it less conducive for further organization.

This story was originally published June 21, 2021 at 7:20 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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