News the vessel had lost contact with shore came as forecasters
shifted the likely track of the potentially catastrophic storm
further away from the U.S. East Coast, but there were still warnings
about the possibility of severe flooding in the Carolinas from
unrelated heavy rains.
Late Friday afternoon, the U.S. National Hurricane Center downgraded
Joaquin, the third hurricane of the 2015 Atlantic season, to a
Category 3 hurricane on a scale of 1 to 5, down from its previous
Category 4 ranking.
By Friday evening, Joaquin's core was beginning to move away from
the central Bahamas, the Miami-based center said in an 8 p.m. EDT
advisory, adding that hurricane conditions would continue for
several more hours.
The storm, packing maximum sustained winds of 125 miles per hour
(205 km per hour), was about 25 miles (40 km) north-northeast of San
Salvador in the Bahamas and moving northeast at 7 mph (11 kph), the
NHC said. The storm's movement was expected to gradually pick up
speed in the next 48 hours.
The U.S. Coast Guard said search and rescue crews were hunting for
the 735-foot (224 m) El Faro and its 33 crew members after it was
overcome by heavy weather from Joaquin off Crooked Island in the
Bahamas on Thursday morning.
The ship, with 28 U.S. citizens and five Polish nationals aboard,
was headed to San Juan, Puerto Rico, from Jacksonville, Florida,
when it reported it had lost propulsion and was listing and taking
on water, the Coast Guard said.
The Coast Guard said there had been no further communications after
the vessel issued the emergency call at about 7:30 a.m. Thursday.
The El Faro was in the eye of Joaquin about 35 miles (56 km)north of
Crooked Island when it issued the distress call, according to Chief
Ryan Doss with the Coast Guard in Miami.
"We have had 20-foot seas reported so it's going to take a while to
get into the area," Doss said.
A Coast Guard cutter headed to help after taking part in a separate
rescue mission off Haiti, while two Air Force Hurricane Hunter
planes searched in vain for the U.S.-owned El Faro.
"The low cloud cover makes satellite communications difficult," Doss
said, while the winds and high seas made it hard to get close enough
by sea or air.
"The storm is so bad and slow moving it's hard for our planes to get
low enough to inspect the surface of the water."
Mike Hanson, a spokesman for the owner of the ship, Tote Maritime
Puerto Rico, told Reuters all contact with the vessel had been lost
since Thursday morning, which he said was "very unusual," especially
as the ship was equipped with a marine transponder, a satellite
phone and GPS locators on the containers. "We checked them all," he
said.
The El Faro, built in 1975, recently underwent a complete updating,
Hanson said.
Captain Stephen Russell, director of the Bahamas National Emergency
Management Agency, said earlier there were no reports of deaths or
injuries in the Bahamas from Joaquin.
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He cited reports of extensive flooding and structural damage on at
least two smaller islands in the archipelago, but apart from some
roofs ripped off houses, damage seemed to be limited.
The storm dumped torrential rain over parts of the Bahamas but its
hurricane-force winds missed the larger islands and the main cities
and cruise ship ports of Freeport and Nassau.
An easterly shift in the forecast track of the slow-moving system
meant it was expected to pass well off the U.S. eastern seaboard,
according to the NHC.
But accumulated rainfall in the Carolinas from unrelated storms this
week coupled with more on the way from Joaquin prompted a warning
from the National Weather Service on Friday about a "historic,
potentially life-threatening rainfall event" in parts of the
Carolinas and northeast Georgia this weekend.
Up to 12 inches (30.5 cm) of rain were expected in some areas
between Friday and Sunday, with flash floods and gusts up to 35
miles per hour (56 kph) likely to topple trees and cause power
outages, the Weather Service said. Flood warnings and coastal flood
advisories were in effect for some sections.
"Our state is now likely to miss any direct impact from the
hurricane, but there’s still significant danger of flooding, high
seas, heavy surf, beach erosion and overwash," North Carolina
Governor Pat McCrory told a news conference on Friday.
Two deaths in the Carolinas on Thursday were linked to heavy
rainfall.
Earlier this week, the governors of New Jersey, Virginia, North
Carolina, South Carolina and Maryland declared states of emergency
and announced measures including mobilization of National Guard
troops in preparation for the storm.
Before the first easterly shift in Joaquin's trajectory, New York
and New Jersey - where Superstorm Sandy killed more than 120 people
and caused $70 billion of property damage in October 2012 - both
faced potential threats from the storm.
(Reporting by David Adams in Miami; Additional reporting by Colleen
Jenkins in North Carolina; Writing by Tom Brown and Jonathan Oatis;
Editing by James Dalgleish and Leslie Adler)
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