(NEW YORK) — Atlantic hurricane season is underway, and this season’s seventh tropical storm, Gaston, is gaining strength off the far eastern Atlantic.
Meanwhile, Fiona is barely holding on as a tropical depression as of Tuesday morning, moving in a west-northwest direction at around 13 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center. Fiona is expected to decrease in forward speed over the next 48 hours.
Gaston has strengthened over the far eastern tropical Atlantic, and is expected to become a Hurricane by Wednesday, according to the National Hurricane Center. Gaston is also moving west-northwest at a speed of nearly 20 mph, although a slight decrease in forward speed is expected during the next few days.
“Even if it becomes a hurricane, it does not affect land,” ABC News meteorologist Ginger Zee said Monday of Gaston on Good Morning America.
#Gaston no threat to land
Tropical wave in E Caribbean=60% chance of becoming tropical depression/storm next 48 hrs pic.twitter.com/I79gN89KIw— Ginger Zee (@Ginger_Zee) August 23, 2016
All eyes are on a third tropical wave over the eastern Caribbean, which has a 60 percent chance of becoming tropical depression or storm in the next 48 hours, Zee added.
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