Tropical Storm Lorenzo Forms Out In The Central Tropical Atlantic
Lorenzo is the 12th named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season and is expected to remain over open waters with no coastal warnings in effect.
- On Monday, Tropical Storm Lorenzo formed in the central tropical Atlantic, located about 1,095 miles west of the Cabo Verde Islands, the National Hurricane Center said.
- The 2025 Atlantic hurricane season has produced a dozen named storms, including Lorenzo, which became the 12th named storm in the season running June 1 through Nov. 30.
- The National Hurricane Center reported Tropical Storm Lorenzo has maximum sustained winds 45 mph, tropical-storm-force winds 90 miles, minimum central pressure 1006 mb, moving northwest at 17 mph.
- There are no coastal watches or warnings in effect for Lorenzo, NHC says, and the storm is not expected to threaten Florida or impact land.
- Forecasters say Lorenzo will head northwest Monday before curving north Tuesday, with gradual intensification expected by midweek and the storm staying over open waters through Saturday.
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Tropical Storm Lorenzo forms; it's not a threat to land
FPREN | By Irene Sans The 12th named storm of this 2025 hurricane season was officially named on Monday, October 13. Lorenzo is a tropical storm with maximum sustained winds estimated at 50 mph, and it’s located in the central Atlantic between Africa and the Caribbean. Lorenzo is expected to make a turn on Tuesday toward the north, staying over the open waters of the Atlantic. This storm does not pose a direct or indirect threat to the Caribbean…
Tropical storm Lorenzo was slightly strengthened on Monday in the Atlantic Ocean, but still does not pose a threat to land, the meteorologists reported.
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