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Here's what we know about a tropical system in the western Caribbean

a weather map showing a blob far south of the Florida panhandle
FPREN

As we start autumn, we are looking at a system that will gradually strengthen over the western Caribbean as it slowly travels northward.

The National Hurricane Center (NHC) gives it an 80 percent chance of development in the next 7 days and a 50 percent chance of development during the next 2 days.

Now that there is an actual low-pressure system that will bring heavy rounds of rain over parts of Central America, we can start to discuss the chances that this system has of affecting Florida.

Remember that the NHC monitors areas where there could be tropical development, but until there is low pressure, models will not grasp the system correctly. Therefore, any discussion about where a system (that doesn’t exist) would end up is pure speculation.

Now that there is a low, the subsequent model runs will start to grasp this system better, as now there is a center to work with and trajectories improve in certainty. However, we must remember that these are still models, and there could be deviations.

What do we know today (Sunday evening) about Invest 97L?

In the short term, we are looking at a storm that will bring heavy rains to Central America, Jamaica, the Cayman Islands, and western Cuba. For Florida, rounds of rain will arrive as early as Tuesday late afternoon or early evening starting over the keys and moving northward.

A group of numerical weather models on track of what is Invest 97L (sept 22, 2024)

The big question remains: how close will it get to the west coast of Florida?

Even though there is good agreement in the early ensemble models that this system will likely make landfall in the northern Gulf Coast somewhere between Mobile and the Big Bend of Florida, a more western track would lessen the impacts to Florida. If the system keeps a more eastern track, Florida would see more impacts, meaning rain, wind, and storm surge.

Rainfall, storm surge, and wind forecast will depend on the track once this low-pressure becomes a tropical system and goes north. We will monitor it and continue to bring you updates throughout the week. This is a good time to check your hurricane kit and emergency plans. The next name on the list is Helene.