2023 Atlantic hurricane season (GiedriusforCat5)

WIP

Hurricane Arlene
On the 29th of July, the NHC noted a Tropical Wave forming over Africa. Over a couple of days, the wave formed into a Tropical Low. On the 1st of August, the low was classified as a Tropical Depression and given the designation 01L. On the 2nd, the depression intensified to Tropical Storm status. The storm, against all predictions, intensified to Category 4 intensity and made landfall on Portuguese soil at peak intensity on the 12th of August. The storm caused 57 billion $ (2023) of damage and killed 51 people.

Tropical Storm Bret
On August 1, The National Hurricane Center is monitoring a tropical wave that is start developing near Mexico. The Gulf is very warm and less wind shear. On August 4, it intensify into a tropical depression and soon it become the second named storm of the season, Bret. Due to Bret is top close to land, Bret is hard to intensify, and in the night of August 4th, Bret make landfall in Mexico and caused 1 million $(2023) of damage and none of people are kill.

Storm names
The following names will be used to name tropical and subtropical cyclones in the 2029 season. This is the same list used in the 2017 season, except for Harold, Idalia, Margot and Nigel, which replaced retired names Harvey, Irma, Maria and Nate. Due to caused damage and deaths, on April 13, 2024 Arlene, was retired and replaced by Argus.

Season effects
This is a table of the storms and their effects in the 2023 Atlantic hurricane season. This table includes the storm's names, duration, peak intensity, Areas affected (bold indicates made landfall in that region at least once), damages, and death totals. Deaths in parentheses are additional and indirect (an example of an indirect death would be a traffic accident), but are still storm-related. Damage and deaths include totals while the storm was extratropical, a wave or a low. All of the damage figures are in 2023 USD (the listed damage figure is in millions).