Gil weakens to tropical storm, not expected to reach land


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Summary

Gil becomes hurricane

Tropical Storm Gil, which is crossing the Pacific Ocean, became a hurricane on Friday, Aug. 1 but weakened back to a storm by the next day.

Tropical storm's path

Gil is expected to get even weaker as it moves over "cooler waters" over the next several days.

DOD reinstates satellite program data

The Department of Defense on Wednesday, July 30, announced it would continue distributing Defense Meteorological Satellite Program data, even though it said in June it would stop doing so.


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Tropical Storm Gil continued to hold steady as it went across the Pacific Ocean on Saturday, Aug. 2. While it became a hurricane the day before, Gil was later downgraded back to a tropical storm.

As of Saturday afternoon, Gil was about 1,355 miles west of the southern tip of Baja California, according to the National Hurricane Center. Gil is forecast to weaken as it moves over “cooler waters” in the next several days, and is not expected to make landfall.

“Geostationary satellite imagery indicates that convection remains confined to the northeast semicircle of the circulation, with the southwestern portion largely devoid of deep convection,” the Hurricane Center said.

Since Gil is losing strength and going by the “low-level flow,” the Hurricane Center anticipates it will take a gradual turn to the west. The storm is expected to dissipate within 96 hours.

Before it started, forecasters predicted that the 2025 storm season would be an especially active one. So far, there hasn’t been as much tropical activity as initially expected.

This season is still fairly close to what it’s been historically, especially compared with 2024, Paul Miller, an associate professor of coastal meteorology at Louisiana State University, said in an interview with The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate.

Still, most named storms, over 80%, formed after Aug. 1, the newspaper wrote, as well as 90% of hurricanes.

“About 85% of hurricane season is still yet to come,” Miller noted.

Satellite weather data on storms being shared again

Meanwhile, the Department of Defense on Wednesday, July 30, announced it would continue distributing Defense Meteorological Satellite Program data, despite the agency saying in June that it would stop doing so.

The DMSP is responsible for building and maintaining satellites that surveil meteorological, oceanographic and solar-terrestrial physics environments.

Storm experts had sounded the alarm on this, including hurricane specialist Michael Lowry, who said in The New York Times the decision was an “incredibly big hit for hurricane forecasts, and for the tens of millions of Americans who live in hurricane-prone areas.”

In addition, Lowry expressed concern over the potential loss of data and how it would affect research.

However, though the Department of Defense originally planned to “phase out the data” as part of its “modernization effort,” a Navy spokesperson said in a statement to NPR that “after feedback from government partners, officials found a way to meet modernization goals while keeping the data flowing until the sensor fails or the program formally ends in September 2026.”

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Why this story matters

Forecasters report that Tropical Storm Gil formed in the eastern Pacific but is not projected to threaten land, highlighting ongoing monitoring of tropical systems and the importance of accurate and accessible weather data for public safety and planning.

Storm forecasting and monitoring

The development and tracking of storms like Gil underscore the need for reliable weather monitoring systems to provide timely updates and minimize risks to communities.

Weather data availability

Concerns over the continuity and sharing of satellite data highlight its essential role in hurricane prediction, risk assessment and broader climate monitoring efforts.

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Behind the numbers

Tropical Storm Gil had maximum sustained winds of 75 mph (120 kph) at its peak and was located over 1,000 miles southwest of Baja California. It gradually weakened to a tropical storm with sustained winds dropping to 70 mph as it encountered cooler waters.

History lesson

Past hurricane seasons have had similar events where storms form but remain at sea. In some years, hurricanes have tracked closer to land, causing significant impacts in Mexico and the United States; this storm followed a more distant path.

Terms to know

Hurricane: A tropical storm with sustained winds of at least 74 mph (119 kph). Tropical storm: Sustained winds of 39–73 mph. Post-tropical: A storm that has lost its tropical characteristics but can still produce weather impacts.

SAN provides
Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

Find out more

Media landscape

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38 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Tropical Storm Gil is currently not a threat to land as it moves in the eastern Pacific Ocean, according to the United States National Hurricane Center.
  • Gil has maximum sustained winds of 75 mph and is moving west-northwest at 20 mph.
  • No coastal watches or warnings are currently in effect, as stated by the U.S. National Hurricane Center.
  • Forecasters expect Gil to weaken and possibly become post-tropical by Sunday, with other storms possibly developing in the area.

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Key points from the Center

  • On Aug. 2, 2025, Hurricane Gil is active in the eastern Pacific Ocean, while Tropical Storm Iona has been downgraded to a tropical depression, with no land threat.
  • Forecasters note that the eastern Pacific Ocean is in a busy period for storms, with Gil’s tail disturbance having medium chances by the weekend and high chances next week.
  • Data shows Gil is around 1,100 miles southwest of Mexico’s Baja California Peninsula with 75 mph winds, moving west-northwest at about 20 mph.
  • Hawaii officials issued fire warnings as seas churned, with gusts of 35 to 40 mph on Oahu and Kauai and humidity dipping to 35–45%.
  • Forecasters also monitor two emerging systems: one southwest of Mexico with a high chance of development within the next seven days and the other’s chances increasing toward mid-next week.

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