Being honest I think Milton or Helene will but not the other storms. The WMO tends to have such high standards for retirement. Like Sally 2020 and Issac 2012 for example should have been retired and they weren’t.
@@chriscastagnetta That's not how it works. Names are retired when the countries affected by a storm request the retirement of the name. Canada has standards for hurricanes that have a major affect on them, like Fiona. With that being said, Grenada will likely ask for Beryl's retirement, and Canada will likely ask for Debby's retirement, seeing as it is now the costliest Canadian tropical system on record.
@@chriscastagnetta The U.S did not request the retirement of either name. A good example of an extreme snub was Hurricane Gordon back in 1994. Killed over 1000 people but the name was kept, because nobody requested it to be retired. It is still used today, as seen this year.
It’s now a game of guessing what names will be retired.
I’ll start:
Beryl
Debby
Helene
Milton
Nailed it.
Being honest I think Milton or Helene will but not the other storms. The WMO tends to have such high standards for retirement. Like Sally 2020 and Issac 2012 for example should have been retired and they weren’t.
@@chriscastagnetta That's not how it works.
Names are retired when the countries affected by a storm request the retirement of the name.
Canada has standards for hurricanes that have a major affect on them, like Fiona.
With that being said, Grenada will likely ask for Beryl's retirement, and Canada will likely ask for Debby's retirement, seeing as it is now the costliest Canadian tropical system on record.
@@NormanWeather oh wow didn’t know that about Debby
But how come Issac (2012) and Sally (2020) were not retired? Smh
@@chriscastagnetta The U.S did not request the retirement of either name. A good example of an extreme snub was Hurricane Gordon back in 1994. Killed over 1000 people but the name was kept, because nobody requested it to be retired. It is still used today, as seen this year.
Bro is testing.
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