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Hurricane forecasters warn of stormy weather near Florida as tropical cyclone brews

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- - - Hurricane forecasters warn of stormy weather near Florida as tropical cyclone brews

Doyle Rice, USA TODAYJuly 4, 2025 at 8:59 PM

Will Chantal become the third named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season this holiday weekend?

A slow-developing weather system is trying to get its act together over the Southeast U.S. this Fourth of July, which, if it forms, would become Chantal.

"Regardless of whether or not that happens, stormy weather will impact areas from Florida to southeast Georgia and the coastal Carolinas," Weather.com said in an online forecast.

The National Weather Service in Jacksonville, Florida, warned drivers that "travel hazards include slick roads and blinding downpours. Flooding of urban, low-lying and poor drainage areas are possible."

Could Chantal form near Florida?

Weather Trader meteorologist Ryan Maue, in a daily email to reporters, said, "something will develop off the U.S. Southeast coast with probably enough of a circulation to be considered a tropical depression – if we named Barry in the southern Bay of Campeche, then this should probably qualify as Chantal."

Keep in mind that tropical depressions don't get names, but tropical storms do: A depression becomes a named storm when its sustained winds reach 39 mph.

As of the morning of July 4, the National Hurricane Center was giving the system a 60% chance of development within the next 48 hours – a medium risk for the holiday weekend.

Heavy rain the primary threat

Forecasters see rain as the main threat from the system: "While a tropical depression or low-grade tropical storm could come together off the Southeast by later this weekend or early next week, periods of heavy rain seeping northward into coastal areas of Georgia and North and South Carolina this weekend will be the primary threat regardless of development," said Michael Lowry, a NOAA veteran and hurricane specialist at WPLG 10 in Miami, in a daily update on his Substack.

Whatever happens, "by Tuesday and Wednesday next week, the system should pick up the pace and pull away from the U.S. as it accelerates up the Eastern Seaboard," Lowry said.

Behind it, he said the Atlantic will stay generally quiet for the remainder of next week.

Hurricane forecasters this Fourth of July are watching a disturbance off the Southeast coast with a medium chance of formation into a cyclone in the next 48 hours. Regardless of formation, it is expected to dump heavy rain in parts of Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas.Third storm of an active season?

If it forms, Chantal would be the third named storm of the Atlantic season, joining little-remembered tropical storms Andrea and Barry.

Most preseason forecasts pointed toward an unusually active Atlantic season, with as many as 19 named storms possible, according to a forecast from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The season was expected to be above normal, NOAA said, "due to a confluence of factors, including continued ENSO-neutral conditions, warmer than average ocean temperatures, forecasts for weak wind shear, and the potential for higher activity from the West African Monsoon, a primary starting point for Atlantic hurricanes."

All of these elements tend to favor tropical storm formation, NOAA said.

An average season features 14 named storms, based on weather records that date from 1991 to 2020.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tropical Storm Chantal could be brewing near Florida

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