Advertisement

Hurricane Ian is here. If there are more, you could see the names Julia, Karl and Lisa soon.

Peak hurricane season is here, and with the arrival of the powerful Hurricane Ian, named storms could still form off the coast of the U.S. until December.

Hurricane season in the Atlantic Ocean began June 1 and will continue through Nov. 30, with peak hurricane possibilities remaining through September.

The first few months of hurricane season were relatively quietTropical Storm Alex hit South Florida, Cuba and the Bahamas on the first weekend of June. Hurricane Danielle was the first hurricane to appear in 2022 and Hurricane Earl arrived shortly afterwards, but none hit the U.S. as a hurricane.

Hurricane Ian marks the first named hurricane to hit the U.S., which is expected to make landfall southwest Florida Wednesday afternoon. Blasting 155 mph winds, the National Hurricane Center said the hurricane will hit the state with life-threatening storm surges, catastrophic winds and flooding.

Here's what to know about tropical storm and hurricane names:

  • Names have been used for tropical storms and hurricanes since 1953.

  • Names are used in case two storms happen at the same time, so people aren't confused or misled.

  • The names are decided well in advance and sometimes recycled.

Hurricane Ian tracker: Where is powerful storm headed next?

Storm surges: Graphics explain the deadly weather event

Ida was a Category 4 hurricane in the Atlantic in August and September 2021. Ida was retired from the list of hurricane names because of the destruction it caused.
Ida was a Category 4 hurricane in the Atlantic in August and September 2021. Ida was retired from the list of hurricane names because of the destruction it caused.

Who decides the names? Why do tropical storms and hurricanes get names?

The names are decided "through a strict procedure" by the World Meteorological Organization, based in Geneva.

The WMO said that originally, storms were named after buildings or structures they damaged, or they were named by where they were located. That could make it hard to follow if the storm moved across a region.

"Tropical cyclones can last for a week or more; therefore, there can be more than one cyclone at a time. Weather forecasters give each tropical cyclone a name to avoid confusion," the WMO said.

In 1953, the National Hurricane Center began using female names for Atlantic storms. Male names were added to the cycle in 1979, and male and females names alternated through the alphabet, though there are no names that begin with Q, U, X, Y or Z. There is a separate list of names for storms in the Pacific and other parts of the world.

A storm gets named when it has sustained winds of 39 mph. A storm becomes a hurricane when it reaches winds of 74 mph.

Hurricane Ian put much of Florida on alert Monday as it moved over the northwest Caribbean and Cuba on Monday September 26, 2021
Hurricane Ian put much of Florida on alert Monday as it moved over the northwest Caribbean and Cuba on Monday September 26, 2021

Tropical storm and hurricane names for 2022:

A name will be retired "if a storm is so deadly or costly that the future use of its name for a different storm would be inappropriate for reasons of sensitivity," according to the World Meteorological Organization.

Ninety-four names have been retired, including Ida, which was retired in April because of the death and destruction the hurricane caused in 2021.

If a storm name is not retired, it is recycled every six years, so this year's names could be used again in 2028.

What if all the names get used?

Greek letters, such as Alpha, Beta and Gamma, were used as supplemental names until the World Meteorological Organization scrapped that practice in 2021.

If all the names are used in 2022, here are backups:

  • Adria

  • Braylen

  • Caridad

  • Deshawn

  • Emery

  • Foster

  • Gemma

  • Heath

  • Isla

  • Jacobus

  • Kenzie

  • Lucio

  • Makayla

  • Nolan

  • Orlanda

  • Pax

  • Ronin

  • Sophie

  • Tayshaun

  • Viviana

  • Will

Contributing: Doyle Rice, USA TODAY

Follow Jordan Mendoza on Twitter: @jordan_mendoza5.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Hurricane names 2022: The list of names for the Atlantic storm season