
The National Hurricane Center says a disturbance is likely to become a tropical depression or Subtropical Storm Epsilon in the Atlantic.
"Showers and thunderstorm activity associated with a non-tropical low pressure system located about 600 miles southeast of Bermuda is poorly organized and displaced well east of the low-level center," according to the Tropical Weather Outlook.
Forecasters say, however, conditions are expected to improve for development.
"Environmental conditions remain conducive for development, and a subtropical depression or storm is very likely to form during the next day or so while the low meanders well to the southeast of Bermuda."
The Hurricane Center says the chance of development is high.
"Formation chance through 5 days...90 percent."
Forecast models show the system staying away from the Gulf of Mexico.
Another area has a low chance of development in the southwestern Caribbean Sea.
If we see two more named storms, it will tie a record for the most ever. Three more will break the record.