Debby becomes a hurricane, takes aim at Florida's Gulf Coast
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[August 05, 2024]
By Rich McKay
(Reuters) - Debby muscled up into a full-fledged hurricane late Sunday
and took aim at making landfall in the Big Bend region of Florida's Gulf
Coast by midday on Monday, the U.S. National Hurricane Center (NHC)
said, warning of life-threatening storm surges.
By 11 p.m. ET (0300 GMT) on Sunday, it had sustained winds of 75 mph
(120 km/h) and was expected continue to strengthen overnight.
The hurricane center forecast life-threatening conditions, including
storm surges up to 10 feet (3 meters) in some areas.
As it slowly moved north through the week, the storm may bring
"potentially historic rainfall" of between 10 and 20 inches (25 and 50
cm) and catastrophic flooding to Georgia and South Carolina, it said.
Local areas could receive 30 inches of rain by Friday morning.
"This is going to be the story of this storm," said Jamie Rhome, the
deputy director of the hurricane center. "It's slow motion is going to
dump historic amounts of rainfall - potentially over 20 inches. You're
talking about catastrophic flooding."
The storm bears some of the hallmarks of Hurricane Harvey, which slammed
into Corpus Christi, Texas, in August 2017. While downgraded into a
tropical storm as it moved inland, it lingered over the state, dumping
about 50 inches of rain on Houston.
Harvey is rated as one of the wettest storms in U.S. history, causing
more than 100 deaths and $125 billion in damage, primarily from flooding
in the Houston metropolitan area.
Rhome said Debby was fueled by exceptionally warm Gulf waters.
Climate scientists believe man-made global warming from burning fossil
fuels has raised the temperature of the oceans, making storms bigger and
more devastating.
Preparing for Debby, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis called up 3,000
National Guard troops and placed most of the state's cities and counties
under emergency orders, while mandatory evacuations were ordered in
parts of the Gulf Coast counties of Citrus, Dixie, Franklin, Levy and
Wakulla.
DeSantis said there were more than 17,000 linemen and other electric
workers ready to restore power.
The governors of Georgia and South Carolina also declared states of
emergency ahead of the storm.
HEAVY RAIN
Debby became a tropical storm late on Saturday. As of 11 p.m. ET, the
hurricane was about 100 miles west of Tampa and moving toward the Gulf
Coast at 12 mph (19 km/h), with maximum sustained winds of 75 mph (120
km/h), the NHC said.
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A man and a dog walk past a business with its doors covered with
sandbags as Tropical Storm Debby approaches the gulf coast in Cedar
Key, Florida, U.S., August 4, 2024. REUTERS/Ricardo Arduengo
The eye of Debby would move across the eastern Gulf of Mexico and
reach the Florida Big Bend coast by midday on Monday, the hurricane
center added. Debby was then expected to move slowly across northern
Florida and southern Georgia on Monday and Tuesday, it said.
The storm is expected to lose some strength after landfall but bring
heavy rain as it crosses central Florida out to the Atlantic coast,
before crawling up to Savannah, Georgia, and then onward to
Charleston, South Carolina, this week, lingering while dumping
catastrophic amounts of precipitation.
Storm surges forecast for Bonita Beach northward to Tampa Bay could
send sea waves further inland than normal, damaging structures and
endangering anyone in their path.
The last hurricane to make a direct hit on the Big Bend region was
Hurricane Idalia, which briefly gained Category 4 strength before
making landfall as a Category 3 in August 2023, with winds of more
than 125 mph. The National Centers for Environmental Information
estimates there were $3.5 billion in damages.
Forecasters expect a large number of Atlantic hurricanes in the 2024
season, which began on June 1, with four to seven seen as major.
That exceeds the record-breaking 2005 season that spawned the
devastating Katrina and Rita hurricanes.
Only one hurricane, Beryl, has yet formed in the Atlantic this year.
The earliest Category 5 storm on record, it struck the Caribbean and
Mexico's Yucatan peninsula before rolling up the Gulf Coast of Texas
as a Category 1 storm, with sustained winds up to 95 mph.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; Additional reporting by Chandni
Shah, Jonathan Allen and Surbhi Misra; Editing by Diane Craft and
Stephen Coates)
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