Top forecasters from Colorado State University upgraded their hurricane predictions for 2023 and are now calling for a “borderline hyperactive” season in the Atlantic basin, with as many as nine hurricanes expected to form.

The upgrade is due primarily to extremely warm ocean water in the Atlantic where storms like to form, forecasters said. The warm Atlantic should counteract the hurricane-snuffing impacts of El Niño.

“Large swaths of the tropical and subtropical North Atlantic are at record warm levels, favoring Atlantic hurricane activity,” Colorado State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach tweeted Thursday. “This anomalous warmth is why CSU’s seasonal hurricane forecast has increased, despite likely robust El Niño.”

Hurricane activity in the Atlantic basin – which consists of the Atlantic Ocean north of the equator, Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico – has been quiet since Tropical Storms Bret and Cindy formed in late June.

How many hurricanes are now expected in 2023 Atlantic season?

The CSU team now predicts 18 named storms this season, of which nine will be hurricanes. Of those nine, four are expected to be major hurricanes – those with a Saffir-Simpson category of 3-5 and sustained winds of 111 mph or greater.

A typical year averages about 14 tropical storms, with seven spinning into hurricanes, based on weather records that date from 1991 to 2020.

The updated forecast is an increase from the 15 named storms, seven hurricanes and three major hurricanes Colorado State predicted on June 1.

The forecast includes four storms that already formed: an unnamed subtropical storm in January and Tropical Storms Arlene, Bret and Cindy in June.