U.S. Gulf Coast braces for Hurricane Ida after Cuba takes hit
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[August 28, 2021]
By Maria Caspani and Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - Hurricane Ida churned toward
the U.S. Gulf coast on Saturday, forecast to gather strength in coming
hours and prompting evacuations of flood-prone New Orleans neighborhoods
and oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico.
Forecasters said it could make U.S. landfall as a dangerous Category 4
storm on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale, generating winds nearing
140 miles per hour (225 kph), heavy downpours and a tidal surge that
could plunge much of the Louisiana shoreline under several feet of
water.
Ida battered Cuba on Friday and by early Saturday it was carrying top
winds of around 80 mph (129 kph) as it headed northwest, the National
Hurricane Center said. The NHC expected the storm to intensify rapidly
before coming ashore by late Sunday.
Flooding from Ida's storm surge - high water driven by the hurricane's
winds - could reach between 10 and 15 feet (3 to 4.5 metres) around the
mouth of the Mississippi River, with lower levels extending east along
the adjacent coastlines of Mississippi and Alabama, the NHC said.
Scattered tornadoes, widespread power outages and inland flooding from
torrential rain across the region were also expected.
Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards, whose state is already reeling from
a public health crisis stemming from a fourth wave of the COVID-19
pandemic, urged residents to ready themselves for the hurricane
immediately.
"Now is the time to finish your preparations," he told a Friday
afternoon news conference. "By nightfall tomorrow night, you need to be
where you intend to ride out the storm."
New Orleans officials ordered residents to evacuate communities
outside the city's levee system, and posted voluntary evacuation notices
for the rest of the parish.
Baton Rouge Mayor Sharon Weston Broome signed an emergency disaster
declaration and said the city had pre-positioned sand and sandbags at
eight strategic locations as part of storm preparations
Lifelong Gulf resident Hailey DeLaune, 29, told Reuters she and her
fiance spent Friday evening boarding up the windows of his house in
Gulfport, Mississippi, and gathering provisions to ride out the storm.
"Hurricanes have always been part of my life," said the high school
theology teacher, who was born during 1992's Category 5 Hurricane
Andrew. "You just run through your list and hope for the best."
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A satellite image shows Tropical Storm Ida after forming in the
Caribbean, about 75 miles (125 kilometers) north-northwest of Grand
Cayman, August 27, 2021. NOAA/via REUTERS
Edwards declared a state of emergency on Thursday,
and on Friday U.S. President Joe Biden issued a pre-landfall federal
emergency declaration at Edwards' request. It authorized the U.S.
Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Emergency Management
Agency to coordinate disaster relief efforts in the state.
Edwards also said he had authorized activation of all 5,000 troops
in the Louisiana National Guard for emergency deployments as needed.
U.S. energy companies racing to complete evacuations of offshore
platforms in the Gulf ahead of the storm had reduced petroleum
production by nearly 60% and gas output by almost half, federal
regulators said.
CARIBBEAN TAKES FIRST HIT
On Friday, Ida smashed into Cuba's small Isle of Youth, off the
southwestern end of the Caribbean island nation, toppling trees and
tearing roofs from dwellings.
Jamaica was flooded by heavy rains, and there were landslides after
the passage of the storm. Many roads were impassable, forcing some
residents to abandon their homes.
Ida, the ninth named storm and fourth hurricane of the 2021 Atlantic
hurricane season, may well exceed the strength of Hurricane Laura,
the last Category 4 storm to strike Louisiana, by the time it makes
landfall, forecasters said.
The region was devastated in August 2005 by Hurricane Katrina, which
killed more than 1,800 people.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta, Brendan O'Brien in Chicago,
Arpan Varghese in Bengaluru, Nelson Acosta in Cuba and Kate Chappell
in Jamaica; Writing by Maria Caspani, Steve Gorman and Frances
Kerry; Editing by David Gregorio, Leslie Adler and Catherine Evans)
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