ALERT: Scientists Warn 2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season May Produce ‘Category 6’ Storms — And U.S. Infrastructure Is Rated D+
40 top scientists warn 2025 hurricanes may exceed Category 5. America’s coastal infrastructure grades D+. FEMA prepared for 2 disasters, not 7. 500,000 could be trapped in Tampa alone.
MIAMI — A coalition of 40 climate scientists from NOAA, MIT, and the National Hurricane Center has issued an extraordinary joint warning: the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season is projected to be the most destructive in recorded history — and America’s coastal infrastructure has received a grade of D+ from the American Society of Civil Engineers.
The warning, published this week in the journal Nature Climate Change, projects 5 to 7 major Category 4 or stronger hurricanes, with two storms potentially reaching sustained wind speeds that would place them in a proposed new “Category 6” designation — winds above 192 mph that the current 1-5 Saffir-Simpson scale was never designed to describe.
“We genuinely don’t have adequate vocabulary for what the ocean is capable of producing right now. The public understands Category 5 as the worst possible storm. It is no longer the worst possible storm. We are in new scientific territory.” — Lead researcher, NOAA Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory
The Infrastructure Crisis
- 42% of coastal bridges in major hurricane-risk zones are classified as structurally deficient (Source: FHWA, 2024)
- 68% of sea walls and coastal flood barriers protecting major cities were constructed before 1980 and have never been upgraded
- The average Gulf Coast power transmission line is 38 years old — with a designed operational life of 40 years
- FEMA’s pre-positioned emergency supplies are adequate for approximately 2 major simultaneous disaster responses — not the 5-7 major storms this season could produce
- 11.4 million Americans live in FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Areas with no flood insurance coverage
The Tampa Bay Evacuation Time Bomb
Traffic flow modeling commissioned by the State of Florida shows that a direct Category 4 hurricane strike on the Tampa Bay metropolitan area would trap an estimated 500,000 residents who cannot evacuate — due to lack of personal vehicles, mobility limitations, or insufficient warning time before storm surge cuts off evacuation routes. Tampa Bay’s evacuation road network has not been meaningfully expanded in 30 years despite 40% population growth.
The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act allocated $7.3 billion specifically for coastal resilience projects. As of Q1 2025, only $1.1 billion — 15% — has been obligated, with the remainder tied up in procurement requirements and local matching conditions that many municipalities cannot meet.
qivsy Forecast: The first Category 5+ hurricane to make direct landfall in a major American metropolitan area will produce casualties and infrastructure destruction exceeding any natural disaster event in American history. Emergency management experts estimate we are 1-3 seasons away from that scenario.
— Report by Dana Cruz, qivsy Health & Society Reporter, Atlanta, GA