
Forecasters are monitoring an area of disturbed weather off the coasts of Central America and southern Mexico that has a medium chance of developing this week. FOX Weather Meteorologists Marissa Torres and Stephen Morgan break down the latest on June 2, 2025.
Tropical activity is picking up in the Eastern Pacific just two weeks after the official start of that basin’s hurricane season, with forecasters monitoring a new area of disturbed weather that could develop into a tropical depression later this week.
This comes days after the Eastern Pacific’s first named storm – Tropical Storm Alvin – formed off the southern coast of Mexico. The storm was short-lived and has since dissipated, but its remnants brought rain and thunderstorms to the Desert Southwest.
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(FOX Weather)
According to the National Hurricane Center (NHC), an area of low pressure is expected to form near or offshore of the southeastern U.S. coast by the middle to end of this new workweek.
The NHC said that when it forms, the disturbance is expected to move northeastward at about 10 to 15 mph.
As a result, the NHC said a tropical depression might form by the end of the week. Currently, the NHC is giving the system a medium chance of developing over the next week.
If the disturbance becomes a tropical depression and then continues to strengthen, it will become a tropical storm and be named Barbara.
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