2094 Atlantic hurricane season (Steven's)

The 2094 Atlantic hurricane season was a very active season, with 31 depressions, 28 named storms, 17 hurricanes, and 10 major hurricanes forming. It was one of few seasons to have activity both before and after the official start and end of the season, which in 2094 the official bounds are May 15th to December 15th. This season had 2 pre-season storms and 1 post-season storm. The pre-season storms were Subtropical Depression One, which formed on January 30, and Hurricane Alan, which formed on May 2nd. Subtropical Depression One was one of the earliest storms on record. Alan was also a very rare pre-season hurricane. The post-season storm was Subtropical Storm Eta, which formed on December 16 and dissipated on December 18. It was the latest storm in at least 10 years.

The activity in this season was much above the average number of storms for 2075-2099, which is 21 named storms. The 28 named storms in this season made it the 4th most active season on record, tied with 2005, 2036, 2052, and 2078. Despite the activity, most of the storms stayed out to sea. The most notable storms of the season were Portia, Walter, and Alpha. Portia was a Category 4 hurricane that impacted the northeast Caribbean islands, Florida, and the US Gulf Coast. It caused $40 billion dollars in damage (2013 USD) and killed 148 people. Walter was another Category 4 hurricane that struck the Yucatan and northern Mexico, with both landfalls at major hurricane intensity. Walter caused $3.5 billion dollars in damage (2013 USD) and killed 35 people. Despite the damage, Walter wasn't retired.

The most devastating storm of the season was Hurricane Alpha, which was an uncommon Category 6 hurricane that reached winds of 220 mph and a pressure of 854 mb. It was the 4th most intense hurricane in the Atlantic since records began, after 3 very intense storms that formed between 2050 and 2093, the most intense reaching 836 mb and winds of 235 mph. The storm moved through the Caribbean, gradually strengthening, before making landfall in Nicaragua at Category 6 intensity. It quickly weakened over Central America before restrengthening in the Gulf and impacting the US Gulf Coast at Category 2 intensity. The results were devastating. Alpha caused $82 billion dollars in damage (2013 USD) and killed 14,895 people due to catastrophic landslides and floods in Nicaragua. Alpha was one of the deadliest hurricanes on record. Since Alpha was a Greek letter, it cannot be retired and was used again in future seasons. Overall, this season was a destructive and deadly season, mainly due to Alpha and Portia.

Season summary
The season started with an extremely pre-season subtropical depression which formed on January 30. It was the earliest storm in more than 15 years. 3 months later, Hurricane Alan formed on May 2 north of the Bahamas. It was one of very few pre-season hurricanes. After that, the official start of the season was on May 15. 3 days after the official start, TS Bernice formed in the Western Caribbean and struck the Yucatan and Florida, causing minor damages. TS Clyde formed later in the month but didn't affect land.

In June, only 1 storm, Hurricane Debra, developed. Debra struck Florida and Mississippi at Cat. 1 intensity, causing moderate damage and 3 deaths.

In July, 5 storms; Eddie, Faye, Gregory, Hermine, and Irving; formed. Eddie was a Cat. 3 hurricane that didn't affect land, Faye was a weak TS in the Windward Islands, Gregory was another weak TS that affected Mexico, Hermine was a Cat.1 that didn't affect land, and Irving was a strong Cat. 5 hurricane that struck Newfoundland at TS intensity.

In August, 5 storms formed, and Irving crossed over from July. The 5 storms were: Jane, Kirt, Lisa, Mark, and Nadia. Jane was a Cat. 2 hurricane that struck the US Gulf Coast and later affected the east coast, Kirt was a Cat. 1 hurricane at a high latitude and didn't affect land, Lisa was a Cat. 3 hurricane that struck the northeast Caribbean islands at TS intensity and Bermuda at peak intensity, Mark was a weak TS near Cape Verde and didn't affect land, and Nadia was a Cat. 1 that struck Texas at peak intensity.

In September, 7 storms formed, including a TD at the beginning of the month. In addition, Nadia crossed over from August. The September storms were: TD 16, Oliver, Portia, Roy, Shary, Tom, and Virginie. TD 16 affected Mexico, Oliver was a Cat. 5 that moved just north of the northeast Caribbean Islands and struck Newfoundland at Cat. 1 intensity, Portia was a destructive Cat. 4 hurricane that struck the northeast Caribbean islands, Hispaniola, Cuba, the Bahamas, Florida, and the US Gulf Coast, Roy was a weak TS that didn't affect land, Shary was a Cat. 3 that struck the Yucatan as a Cat. 3 and Florida as a Cat. 2, Tom was a TS that struck Alabama, and Virginie was a Cat. 3 that didn't affect land.

In October, 5 storms formed, including Subtropical Depression 25 and Hurricane Gamma, which formed on the last day of the month. Hurricane Virginie crossed over from September. The 5 storms that formed were: Walter, Alpha, Subtropical Depression 25, Beta, and Gamma. Walter was a Cat. 4 hurricane that struck the Yucatan at peak intensity and northern Mexico at Cat. 3 intensity, Alpha was an extremely deadly and destructive Cat. 6 hurricane that struck Nicaragua at peak intensity and the US Gulf Coast at Cat. 2 intensity, Subtropical Depression Twenty-Five was near the Azores but didn't affect land, Beta was a weak TS that didn't affect land, and Gamma was a Cat. 4 that formed in the western Caribbean and struck Nicaragua at Cat. 1 intensity, Cuba at Cat. 4 intensity, and the Bahamas at C3/C4 intensity.

Finally, in November and December, 4 storms; Delta, Epsilon, Zeta, and Eta formed. In addition, Gamma crossed into November and Zeta crossed into December. Delta was a TS that struck Nicaragua, Epsilon was a Cat. 1 that didn't affect land, Zeta was a weak and disorganized TS that struck Hispaniola, and Eta was a weak subtropical storm that didn't affect land. Over all, there were 31 depressions, 28 named storms, 17 hurricanes, and 10 major hurricanes (C3 and stronger), making this season a very active and destructive one.

Storm names
The following names were used to name tropical cyclones this year. This is the same list used in the 2088 season, expect for Hermine, Irving, and Lisa, which replaced Hope, Ivor, and Lucy. This was the first time that the NHC brought back previously retired names, as they were starting to run out of replacement names. The name Hermine was retired after the 2028 season, and Lisa was retired after the 2034 season. The name Irving was used for the first time this year. Names that were not used are marked in.

Greek Alphabet
Since this season exhausted the main list, the Greek Alphabet was used this year. The first 7 names of this list were used this year.

Retirement
Due to extensive damage and deaths, the name Portia was officially retired, and will never be used again for an Atlantic hurricane. It was replaced by Pamela in the 2100 Atlantic hurricane season. Pamela was itself retired in 2100 after causing extensive damage and deaths. Also, during the season in 2100, the names Qualia, Unala, Xavier, Yolanda, and Zeke were added due to extreme activity. Although Alpha was destructive enough to be retired, it was a Greek letter, so it cannot be retired.

List for 2100 (original version, before the Q, U, X, Y, and Z names were added):