Remnants of Nadine not going away as reorganization likely in Eastern Pacific this week

Since this is not Nadine's original circulation, the National Hurricane Center will use the next name on the Eastern Pacific list – Kristy – rather than stick with Nadine. If a powerful hurricane does form, it is expected to stay out to sea and not affect land, the FOX Forecast Center said.

Remnants of Tropical Storm Nadine could potentially reorganize into a new tropical system in the Eastern Pacific Ocean this week. 

Since this is not Nadine's original circulation, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) will use the next name on the Eastern Pacific list – Kristy – rather than stick with Nadine.

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Nadine made landfall near Belize City on Saturday afternoon, bringing sustained winds of 60 mph. After moving inland, the storm weakened and dissipated over southern Mexico on Sunday.

The NHC has now designated the area of showers and thunderstorms associated with once-Nadine as Invest 90E. An invest is simply a designation used to indicate an area under particular scrutiny by the NHC.

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The area of low pressure is currently located a few hundred miles offshore of the coast of southern Mexico and continues to become better organized, the NHC said Monday afternoon.

"If these trends continue, advisories will likely be initiated on this system as a tropical depression or storm at 2 p.m. PDT," the NHC said in its latest outlook. "This system is forecast to move westward at around 15 mph away from the coast of Mexico."

If a powerful hurricane does form, it is expected to stay out to sea and not affect land, the FOX Forecast Center said.