Latest Data from NHC
Current Tropical Status
In their morning briefings, the National Hurricane Center confirms that tropical cyclone formation is completely absent across the entire Eastern North Pacific basin. There are zero active storms, and none are expected to develop anywhere in the region over the course of the next seven days. The monsoon trough and its associated convective thunderstorm activity remain pinned far to the south in the deep tropical latitudes near Central America, leaving the shipping lanes and coastal waters around the peninsula entirely free of organized tropical systems.
Tropical Weather Outlook
While satellite imagery captures convective cells well to the south along the monsoon trough, the official marine discussions show that the broader regional atmosphere lacks any low-level structural organization or concentrated cyclonic activity. It presents zero threat to regional landmasses or maritime operators. The main offshore feature remains the stalling stationary front up north, which is interacting with a mid-latitude high-pressure ridge to pump a heavy, long-period northwest swell into the open Pacific waters. Closer to the coast, the localized pressure gradient is maintaining fresh, brisk north-to-northwesterly winds across the exposed Pacific waters, keeping near-shore sea states highly dynamic.

Satellite Radar Imaging
