Hurricane Kiko will make historic direct hit on US, models predict
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Hurricane Kiko’s course has shifted and the major storm is now headed straight for Hawaii in a rare weather event for the islands.

New spaghetti models of the Category 2 hurricane project that the storm will strike Hawaii’s Big Island by next week.

Kiko has intensified in the eastern Pacific Ocean, with local meteorologists now forecasting that it will become a major Category 3 hurricane by Wednesday.

The storm has sustained winds of more than 100 mph after reaching hurricane status early Tuesday morning. 

The last major hurricane to directly strike Hawaii was Hurricane Iniki in September 1992.

It made landfall as a Category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 145 mph on September 11, leading to six fatalities, destroying more than 1,400 homes, and causing roughly $3 billion in damage.

As feared by forecasters in Hawaii, Kiko’s trajectory appears to have altered slightly to the right, steering it towards the US islands and away from the turbulent air that could have disrupted the hurricane’s formation.

AccuWeather meteorologists agreed with the new spaghetti models, projecting that Kiko will make landfall in Hawaii at night on Tuesday, September 9.

Hurricane Kiko entered Wednesday as a Category 2 storm with sustained winds of more than 100 mph

Hurricane Kiko entered Wednesday as a Category 2 storm with sustained winds of more than 100 mph

New prediction models for Hurricane Kiko warn that the storm may make a direct hit on Hawaii's Big Island in the coming days

New prediction models for Hurricane Kiko warn that the storm may make a direct hit on Hawaii’s Big Island in the coming days

Up to eight inches of rain could pound the eastern side of the Big Island (Hawaii Island) once the storm hits, with around two inches predicted for the rest of the state next week. 

Officials in Hawaii have not issued any hurricane warnings or alerts as of Wednesday morning. 

The weather team from Hawaii News Now noted that it’s still too early to say for sure if the hurricane will make landfall on the Big Island, but the number of models projecting a direct hit have been growing.

A spaghetti model shows the different possible paths a tropical storm or hurricane might take, based on predictions from multiple weather computer programs.

Each line represents one model’s guess about where the storm could go. If the lines are close together, it means most models agree on the path, and the prediction is more certain.

Forecasters at NHC have projected that Kiko will continue to strengthen, churning into a major hurricane, until Saturday.

At that point, meteorologists expect the hurricane to weaken as it moves into cooler waters closer to Hawaii and encounters more wind shear.

That means Kiko is expected to run into stronger winds blowing at different heights in the atmosphere which can tear apart a hurricane’s structure. 

The National Hurricane Center has revealed that Hurricane Kiko's path has shifted, putting it on a course for the Hawaiian Islands next week

The National Hurricane Center has revealed that Hurricane Kiko’s path has shifted, putting it on a course for the Hawaiian Islands next week

The last major hurricane above Category 3 to directly strike Hawaii was Hurricane Iniki in 1992

The last major hurricane above Category 3 to directly strike Hawaii was Hurricane Iniki in 1992

Kiko is already the 11th named system in the eastern Pacific this year, and the Pacific hurricane season still has three months left to go.

The season runs from May 15 until November 30, making it two weeks longer than the Atlantic hurricane season.

Previously, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) had predicted a ‘below-normal season’ for the eastern Pacific, with 12 to 18 named storms, five to 10 hurricanes, and up to five major hurricanes.

Another Pacific hurricane formed early Wednesday morning, Lorena, which is swirling off the coast of Mexico and could threaten states like Arizona and New Mexico this weekend.

On the other side of the US, NOAA projected an ‘above average’ season in the Atlantic which would likely more named storms than there were in 2024.

Overall, NOAA predicted up to 19 named storms, 10 hurricanes, and five major hurricanes affecting the US in 2025 .

NHC forecasters have been tracking the latest disturbance headed toward the East Coast, which now has a 70 percent chance of becoming a tropical depression by the end of the week, setting up the potential for the next named storm, Gabrielle.

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