AccuWeather's latest storm news said that storm Lorenzo is continuing to weaken. The storm has the strongest wind near the center of the storm at 64 km/h, moving north-northwest at a speed of 20 km/h.
Lorenzo is expected to continue moving northwest today, then turn north tonight.
The latest storm of the Atlantic hurricane season will gradually weaken as it moves north. There is currently no threat to land from Hurricane Lorenzo.
Lorenzo is the 12th named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season. An average of 14 named storms per typhoon season.
In addition to monitoring Hurricane Lorenzo, AccuWeather hurricane experts are monitoring the risk of a developing tropical depression in the Atlantic Ocean from October 19 to 23.
A low pressure will move off the coast of Africa this weekend and may become more organized by the weekend. The system is expected to develop and strengthen before reaching the Lesser Antilles early next week.
The warm, warm waters in the southern Atlantic and weaker wind shear could strengthen into a tropical storm as it approaches the Caribbean.
The next Atlantic storm name is Melissa. If the system reaches the western Caribbean, it is likely to rapidly strengthen and could become a hurricane.
AccuWeather is monitoring the possibility of a new low pressure developing in the eastern Pacific. A low pressure in southern Mexico is forecast to strengthen in the middle to the end of this week.
The new low pressure is likely to move westward but still risks affecting weather in western Mexico and the southwest of the United States, causing heavy rain and flooding.
The most recent storm in the eastern Pacific, Typhoon Raymond, made landfall in Mexico, causing heavy rain. Raymond is the 17th storm in the eastern Pacific basin.
The next storms on the eastern Pacific's 2025 forecast list are Sonia and Tico.