In brief: None of the currently highlighted areas in the Atlantic will threaten land. We discuss some of the speculation surrounding what may come next in the Atlantic, which is probably something of note but what exactly that is is very much TBD. Also, today is the first day since mid-June without a level 2 or higher risk of flooding somewhere in the U.S., ending a remarkable and painful 46-day streak.
The current trio
We’ve seen few changes in the overall expectation that the current three systems highlighted in the Atlantic are unlikely to be threats to land.
Disturbance off the Carolinas
Good news overall. The system off the Carolina coast has not shown any further signs of development, and it appears that its best chance to do so will be on exit from the East Coast as it generally follows Dexter’s path out to sea.
Development odds have been reduced to 30 percent here as the system exits stage right. At this point there is no sign that this will impact land as it moves away. It could meander a little for a couple days south of Atlantic Canada but it currently looks to be far enough away to avoid any impacts.
Invest 96L in the deep Atlantic
The Atlantic wave got tagged as Invest 96L today, so now we can see some additional forecast data on this in the coming days. Currently, there’s not much to this. But models do indicate that in the coming days, we will see some development. It’s expected to continue to move somewhere between west-northwest and due northwest, which should keep it well north of the Caribbean islands. From there, it still seems likely to find the escape route north and northeast out to sea. Odds of development are 60 percent but odds of land impacts are close to zero at this time.
Tropical Storm Dexter clinging to life
Dexter will likely turn extratropical by this afternoon as it races out to sea. The transition to extratropical just means that it’s no longer deriving its energy from the warmer water and tropical processes. Rather, it’s now behaving more like a nor’easter and being driven by other meteorological processes, acquiring fronts, etc. In the case of Dexter, it is likely to become a hurricane-force non-tropical low pressure, or essentially a major cyclone over the open ocean that isn’t a tropical system. Hazardous for shipping, may produce some rough seas off Newfoundland but nothing more than that.

Dexter should eventually end up absorbed into a system or two approaching Europe next week, unlikely to produce any major impacts there.
Speculating on the Atlantic’s future
We’re starting to notice the “churn” in comments, posts, questions, etc. that usually begins to happen in August. Much of it focuses on what this model or that model did during a specific run. Yesterday’s fun and games came courtesy of the evening GFS operational model, as it often does (earning it the nickname the “happy hour run”), which decided that one storm wasn’t enough, so it would plant two of them on either side of Florida on day 16. Look, you do you in terms of looking at weather data, but the GFS operational beyond day 10 is virtually useless. So, I’m going to pretend that never happened.
However…
There is good reason to think that we could have something a little more interesting by the time we get to the late forecast period. This would be more in the August 20th-ish timeframe. You can see this by looking at the European model ensemble spaghetti plot. Again, these aren’t answer keys, but rather they’re showing you what each of the 51 ensemble members is doing with a specific system. Each ensemble member is tweaked just a little to create the real uncertainty that exists in the atmosphere at any given moment due to observational capabilities and thus each ensemble member produces a unique outcome. Within that “noise,” occasionally you can derive a signal to push your confidence one way or another.

In this case, we have a strong signal showing up for a system, but its track representation and intensity representation lives in a sea of noise. So what we can say with authority today is that conditions may be favorable for this tropical wave emerging off Africa in a couple days to perhaps become a development candidate somewhere in the Atlantic or Caribbean about 6 to 10 days from now. In fact, yesterday’s European weekly tropical cyclone anomaly chart does show slightly above normal chances for a system in the southwest Atlantic in week 2 (Aug 18-25).

All this says is that there’s a slightly better chance than usual that a system could end up somewhere in the southwest Atlantic. We can corroborate this with the traditional model ensembles, as both the Euro and GFS ensembles show at least some noise in this general area. There also seems to be some AI model agreement on this as well.
All we can say definitively today is that the next wave emerging off Africa is creating some noise in model runs that make it an area we’ll probably be watching for several days. We have no idea where it’s heading or what shape it will be in when it gets there, and it doesn’t make sense to even begin to speculate on that topic. What we can do is remind folks that it’s the ramp up to peak hurricane season now, and with quiet conditions this weekend, perhaps it’s a good time to review your kits, checklists, etc. and ensure you are prepared in case this is the year for you. We’ll let you know what we know when we know it.
Lowest flooding risk in weeks
Today is the first day since June 21st that the Weather Prediction Center’s excessive rainfall outlook has not had a level 2 (slight) or higher risk. 46 straight days of slight risks or worse. If it’s not a record, it’s close.
We will have much more to say about flooding and risks and all that eventually. I wrote a bit about flash flood warnings on my personal Substack yesterday. But I hope the folks at the Weather Prediction Center can catch their breath for a couple days now. Remarkable summer.