Potential Tropical Cyclone One could become first named storm of 2026 hurricane season

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Potential tropical cyclone 1 develops

FOX 13 Meteorologist Jim Weber is keeping an eye on a potential tropical cyclone off the coast of Texas. It was designated as Invest 90 and was sitting over land Tuesday morning, but it is expected to work its way back out over water and could become a tropical storm on Tuesday night or Wednesday morning. Weber says it will likely work its way toward the northeast and make landfall between Texas and Louisiana. If it does become a named storm, it will be Arthur.

Potential Tropical Cyclone One, which was sitting over Texas on Tuesday morning, has the potential to become the first named storm of the 2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season.

Potential Tropical Cyclone One

What we know:

The remnants of Pacific Tropical Storm Cristina have crossed the Yucatán Peninsula and entered Mexico, forming a messy system known as Invest 90, which developed into Potential Tropical Cyclone One.

On Tuesday morning, the disturbance sat over Texas, creating convection and heavy rainfall.

Potential Tropical Cyclone One could develop into Tropical Storm Arthur after it briefly enters the Gulf. 

As of 11 a.m. Tuesday, Potential Tropical Cyclone One was located at 27 degrees latitude and 98 degrees longitude.

The system is moving northeast at 6 mph with sustained winds of 30 mph, already sending rough swells and heavy downpours crashing into the Texas shoreline.

A weather map displays active tropical storm watches stretching along the Gulf Coast from southern Texas into Louisiana.

Future storm track

FOX 13 Meteorologist Jim Weber said Potential Tropical Cyclone One will likely move over the waters of the Gulf of Mexico and that’s when it could become Tropical Storm Arthur on Tuesday night or Wednesday morning.

It is then expected to come ashore between Texas and Louisiana before weakening as it moves north and east.

Several advanced computer tracking models project the path of Potential Tropical Cyclone One as it moves from the Texas coast toward the northeastern United States.

Expected system damage

Why you should care:

The system is projected to push a storm surge of 2 to 4 feet along the coast, but meteorologists warn that the primary threat is heavy, torrential rain.

After making landfall near the Texas and Louisiana border, the system is expected to weaken as it moves to the northeast.

The storm's path means Florida will experience below-normal rain chances.

The Source: The information in this story was gathered from FOX 13 Meteorologist Jim Weber, who explained the storm's current metrics, tracking data, and rain projections, as well as tracking data for Potential Tropical Cyclone One.

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