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FOX and Friends Sunday

>> welcome back to "fox & friends." tracking the tropics, a lot of activity going on especially for florida, not much time to watch this. take a look at the weather map. we're heading towards the meeting time of hurricane season. we've got 78% of our general hurricane activity ahead of us but we're headed towards the peak which is september 10th. when you look across the tropics, a lot going on. the one that is very concerning is where you see the word 10, that's across parts of the western carribean, this is a system that's going to develop into a tropical storm likely later on today and going to continue to pull out towards the north. when you see it, the national hurricane center forecasting a category 1 hurricane making landfall sometime tuesday night into wednesday morning across the northern part of florida. plenty of time to see this forecast tweaked a little bit. not a lot of time for preparation. because this is happening without a lot of warning, if you're on the western side of

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CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield

behind hilary to the south. and then four possible systems we're watching in the atlantic. it's that time of year again. we will likely be busy in giving you more updates. >> it had been a fairly mild summer, but this is approaching that peak season for hurricane activity. thanks so much. debris flow remains a major concern as hilary marches toward southern california. signs up are warning residents near burn areas in the san bernardino mountains. on the coast, officials are creating sand barriers on some beaches. the storm is even forcing sports teams to overhaul their weekend schedules. the mlb has moved its sunday games hosted by the dodgers and angels and padres to be split double headers today. major league soccer rescheduled tomorrow's matches to later

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CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield

single day. and so certainly we're going to be watching very carefully for flash floods, mudslides, debris flows in that area, looking at the burn scars from fires that have happened in recent years for mudslides. so lots of work happening behind us, thinking about vulnerable californians, those in hospitals, nursing homes, homeless people or people who live outdoors and what we can do to get people out of the storm's path before it arrives. i think we have 8 to 16 hours to do that preparation, so we're working on a pace today to try to keep as many people safe as possible. >> yeah, because even when we're looking at pictures there in santa barbara, people who are making sandbags, this is not something that a whole lot of folks are accustomed to on a regular basis, like the east coast with a threat of constant hurricane activity, they know how to board up their windows, use of sandbags like that, and their evacuation zones. you mentioned if there were evacuations that you had to

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BBC News

july we have had a tropical storm and in august we had a hurricane which is pretty strong, so this is something that we always keep watching, this hurricane developed following el nino.- this hurricane developed following el nino. there was about 9096 _ following el nino. there was about 9096 less _ following el nino. there was about 9096 less rainfall i following el nino. there was about 9096 less rainfall in i about 90% less rainfall in hawaii recently than in central areas, there really dry conditions. what's behind that? to those numbers strike you as out of the ordinary yes, those numbers are really alarming. t numbers are really alarming. i think that of course, the climate is changing, so it is different from before, and we do see more and more wildfire activity, temperature rise, sealevel rise, more hurricane activity, more drought, so they are all linked together. irate are all linked together. we have also _

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BBC News

i think that, of course, the climate is changing, so that it's different from before, and we do see more and more wildfire activity, temperature rise, sea level rise, we have more hurricane activity, we have more drought, so they are all linked together. we've also seen these kinds of devastating wildfires hitting other parts of the globe. hitting the western united states. how vulnerable was away previously to wildfires? was it considered a risk zone? —— how vulnerable was hawaii previously to wildfires? usually, wildfires do not receive much attention in hawaii because the inaudible land area is very small.

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BBC News

changing, it is different from before, and we do see more and more wildfire activity, temperature rise, sea level rise, we have more hurricane activity, we have more droughts. so they are all adding together. we droughts. so they are all adding together. we have also seen these _ adding together. we have also seen these kind _ adding together. we have also seen these kind of— adding together. we have also seen these kind of devastating wildfires in other parts of the globe, hitting the western of the united states. how vulnerable was hawaii previously to wildfires? was it considered a risk zone? usually wildfires do _ considered a risk zone? usually wildfires do not _ considered a risk zone? usually wildfires do not received - considered a risk zone? usually wildfires do not received muchl wildfires do not received much attention in hawaii, because the land area is allegedly small, and basically in the tropical islands, we have lots of vegetation, compared to california, that hawaii is not considered wildfire prone region. but this time, it is

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Early Start

last 100 days of the year typically bring the cheapest gasoline prices of the year. there have been a whirl wind of events. but keep an eye on hurricane activity. that is always the wild card that you have to watch out for starting in late august into september. and when the hurricane season finally ends at the end of the october. >> so watch hurricane season but all things considered we should hopefully be coming off -- >> yeah, when it comes to a hurricane, between corpus christi, texas and mississippi, anything else is more of a demand destroyer. >> great to have you. and coming up on "cnn this morning," a legal battle over evidence in donald trump's january 6 case. and next here, what happened when the astros went to the white house?

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Your World With Neil Cavuto

generally the first a name is june 20th. that is right about where we are now. august 3 is when we would normally see that. 98% still of our hurricane season is remaining. september 10, 11 is the peak. we have most of our hurricane activity then. we're looking at the eastern atlantic. 7 or 8 degrees a before where we would typically be. water doesn't heat up as fast as area. anywhere where you see yellow, those are water temperatures above average. in the pacific, this is el nino. when you have el nino, generally less activity in the atlantic because there's less hostile winds. we're in to el nino and likely to going to get in to a strong el nino. later on in the season, maybe that begins to have a bigger impact. because we've seen these three storms doesn't mean that that

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CNN Newsroom Live

it is heartbreaking. >> victor blackwell, cnn, orlando. >> so thursday was the first day of this year in caribbean season. and if right on cue, a tropical storm, there, is currently churning in the gulf of mexico, so what are experts predicting for the season, cnn's -- reports. >> no one is predicting a near normal 2023, atlantic hurricane season. >> near normal, which depending on where you, live may have a very different meaning. >> there is nothing good about in your normal hurricane season in terms of hurricane activity, we are expecting a busy season. >> busy indeed, forecasters predict up to 17 tropical storms could develop, of those, 5 to 9 could become hurricanes, and possibly four of those could become major hurricanes, category three or higher with sustained winds of up to 129 miles per, hour or stronger. >> that raises the prospects for significant impact. >> on day one of the season,

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