DENVER -- Hurricane researchers at Colorado State University said yesterday that this year's hurricane season won't be as bad as earlier predicted and said a monster storm like Katrina is unlikely.
``The probability of another Katrina-like event is very small," said Phillip Klotzbach, lead forecaster for the university's hurricane research team.
The researchers reduced the number of likely hurricanes from nine to seven, and the number of intense hurricanes from five to three.
There is, however, a considerably higher-than-average probability of at least one intense hurricane making landfall in the United States this year, 73 percent. The average is 52 percent.
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