Here are the names you’ll see during the 2022 Atlantic hurricane season

Hurricane name lists in the Atlantic Basin are reused every 6 years, with one caveat

The 2022 Atlantic hurricane season is less than two months away, and with early outlooks predicting yet another active season, you might be wondering what names will be used for any tropical storms and hurricanes that develop in the months ahead.

Hurricane season kicked off before the official June 1 start date every year from 2015 to 2021, so it's not out of the question that we could have our first named storm of 2022 before the end of May.

The graphic below shows the complete list of names selected by a committee of the World Meteorological Organization for the 2022 Atlantic hurricane season.

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The hurricane naming convention was established in 1950, according to the National Hurricane Center. Initially, the phonetic alphabet was used for naming, but that practice was ditched in 1953 for a larger variety of names.

The NHC assigns a name to any tropical cyclone that becomes a tropical storm (39-plus-mph winds) or hurricane (74-plus-mph winds). The NHC goes through the list in alphabetical order, so the first tropical storm or hurricane receives the "A" name (Alex) and the 21st such storm receives the "W" name (Walter).

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Previously, if all 21 names were used, the Greek alphabet would then be used if necessary. It was used nine times in the record-breaking 2020 season and twice in 2005. However, as of 2021, any additional storms now receive a name from a new supplemental list created by the WMO because the use of Greek letters can become confusing for messaging purposes (Zeta, Eta and Theta all sound very similar).

While it hasn't yet been used, the supplemental list includes Adria, Braylen, Caridad and Deshawn. A complete list of the 21 supplemental names is shown in the table below.

This year’s primary list of names might look familiar to the one from 2016. That’s because these name lists rotate every six years – a practice which began in 1979 – unless a particular storm is so destructive and/or deadly that the WMO votes to retire that name from future use, such as Harvey, Katrina, Michael or Sandy.

Two storms from 2016 do not appear on the 2022 list: Matthew and Otto.

Hurricane Matthew peaked at Category 5 intensity on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale over the southern Caribbean Sea on Sept. 30, 2016. According to the NHC, the storm reached Category 5 status at the lowest latitude ever recorded in the Atlantic Basin.

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Matthew was a Category 4 hurricane when its eye came ashore in both Haiti and eastern Cuba on Oct. 4, 2016. The hurricane was responsible for 585 direct deaths, of which more than 500 were in Haiti, making it the deadliest Atlantic hurricane since Stan in 2005, the NHC noted in its final report on Hurricane Matthew.

Then, Matthew moved northward into the Bahamas as a Category 3 and 4 hurricane on Oct. 5 and 6. It approached the southeastern United States in the days that followed, passing very close to the coasts of Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas.

Hurricane Matthew made one U.S. landfall on Oct. 8 as a Category 1 storm near McClellanville, South Carolina. Hurricane-force wind gusts were measured from Florida to North Carolina, accompanied by a powerful storm surge and torrential rainfall that led to flash flooding and river flooding along much of the Southeast coast.

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Later that season, Hurricane Otto was a rare storm that crossed from the southwestern Caribbean Sea into the Eastern Pacific Ocean by plowing through Nicaragua and Costa Rica in late-November 2016. Heavy rainfall and flooding from the hurricane caused 18 fatalities in Central America.

Otto was a Category 3 hurricane when it made landfall in extreme southern Nicaragua, just over 10 miles northwest of the Nicaragua-Costa Rica border, on Nov. 24, 2016, which was Thanksgiving Day. According to the NHC, Otto set several historical records:

  • It was the latest in a calendar year that a hurricane had ever formed in the Caribbean Sea
  • It was the strongest hurricane on record so late in the year in the Atlantic Basin
  • It was the latest in a calendar year that a hurricane had ever been present in the Caribbean Sea
  • It was the latest in a calendar year that an Atlantic Basin hurricane had ever made landfall
  • It was the farthest south a hurricane had ever made landfall in Central America
  • It was the only known hurricane to move over Costa Rica

Otto was one of a small number of tropical cyclones that maintained its tropical status while crossing from the Atlantic to the Eastern Pacific Basin. The last storm to do so was Hurricane Cesar, which made landfall in Nicaragua as a hurricane in late-July 1996 and was still a tropical depression when it entered the far Eastern Pacific Ocean.

THE BEASTS OF THE ATLANTIC: 93 HURRICANE OR TROPICAL STORM NAMES HAVE BEEN RETIRED

It should come as no surprise that the WMO voted to retire both Matthew and Otto from future use in the Atlantic Basin, which includes the Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico. This year’s "M" and "O" storms will be Martin and Owen, respectively.