Tropical Storm Lorenzo strengthens in central tropical Atlantic after becoming 12th named storm of season

According to the National Hurricane Center, Lorenzo is supposed to maintain its intensity Monday before undergoing some gradual strengthening by the middle of the week.

MIAMI Tropical Storm Lorenzo is now strengthening after it formed early Monday in the central tropical Atlantic, according to the National Hurricane Center (NHC). 

The NHC said that Tropical Storm Lorenzo currently has maximum sustained winds of 50 mph. A tropical storm has maximum sustained winds between 39 and 73 mph.

Lorenzo is some 1,150 miles west of the Cabo Verde Islands, located off the western coast of Africa, and is moving northwestward at 16 mph.

Tropical Storm Lorenzo is the 12th named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season. 

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According to the NHC, Lorenzo is supposed to maintain its intensity Monday before undergoing some gradual strengthening by the middle of the week.

The system is expected to move northwestward on Monday before turning toward the north on Tuesday, remaining over the open waters of the Atlantic without posing a threat to land.

Lorenzo developed from an area of thunderstorms that the NHC designated as Invest 97L over the weekend.

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This development comes as a La Niña weather pattern emerges for a second consecutive year, which could have a noticeable impact on seasonal weather patterns.

So far, the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season has produced 12 named storms. 

Four of those storms became hurricanes, three of which reached major hurricane status of a Category 3 or higher on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale

The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 to Nov. 30.