The name Carlos has been used for eight tropical cyclones in the Eastern Pacific Ocean.
The name Carlos has been used once in the Australian region.
The name Carlos has been used once in the South-West Indian Ocean.
The name Chris has been used for seven tropical cyclones in the Atlantic Ocean.
The name Cindy has been used for eleven tropical cyclones worldwide.
The 2003 Pacific hurricane season was the first season to feature no major hurricanes – storms of Category 3 intensity or higher on the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale (SSHWS) – since 1977. The dates conventionally delimiting the period when most tropical cyclones form in the Pacific Ocean are May 15 in the Eastern Pacific Ocean and June 1 in the Central Pacific, with both seasons ending on November 30. The 2003 season featured 16 tropical storms between May 19 and October 26; 7 of these became hurricanes, which was then considered an average season. Damage across the basin reached US$129 million, and 23 people were killed by the storms.
The name Barbara has been used for thirteen tropical cyclones worldwide: two in the Atlantic Ocean, seven in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, one in the South Pacific Ocean, one in the Western Pacific Ocean, and two in the South-West Indian Ocean. It has also been used to name one extratropical cyclone in the UK and Ireland.
The name Blanca has been used for eleven tropical cyclones in the Eastern Pacific Ocean.
The name Cosme has been used for seven tropical cyclones in the Eastern Pacific Ocean.