From News Nation:
“U.S. Gulf Coast braces for
Hurricane Ida after Cuba hit”
Hurricane Ida on Saturday
strengthened and the reach of its winds expanded over warm Gulf of Mexico
waters, prompting tens of thousands to cut short vacations and jam Louisiana
highways. Forecasters said it could make U.S. landfall as an “extremely
dangerous” Category 4 storm on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale, generating
winds of 140 miles per hour, heavy downpours and a tidal surge that could
plunge much of the Louisiana shoreline under several feet of water. On Saturday
morning, Ida was about 435 miles southeast of Houma, Louisiana, packing top
winds of 85 mph and tracking toward a late Sunday landfall, the National
Hurricane Center said. “We’re concerned about explosive development shortly
before it makes landfall,” said Jim Foerster, chief meteorologist at DTN, which
provides weather advice to oil and transportation companies. “It’s going to be
moving over some warm water,” he said. Flooding from Ida’s storm surge — high
water driven by the hurricane’s winds — could reach between 10 and 15 feet
around the mouth of the Mississippi River, with lower levels extending east
along the adjacent coastlines of Mississippi and Alabama, the NHC said. Officials
ordered widespread evacuations of low-lying and coastal areas, jamming highways
and leading some gasoline stations to run dry as residents and vacationers fled
the seashore.
POWER OUTAGES EXPECTED Utilities
were bringing in extra crews and equipment to deal with expected power losses from
the storm. Hundreds of thousands of homes could fall dark as Ida’s strong winds
carry well into Louisiana and as far east at Mobile, Alabama, said DTN’s
Foerster. Lifelong Gulf resident Hailey DeLaune, 29, told Reuters she
and her fiancé 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.” Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards, whose
state is 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 said at a
Friday news conference. “By nightfall tomorrow night, you need to be where you
intend to ride out the storm. Edwards declared a state of emergency, and
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.
GASOLINE OUTPUT CUT U.S.
energy companies sharply reduced offshore petroleum production by nearly 60%
and gasoline refiners cut operations at Louisiana plants in the path of the
storm. Regional fuel prices rose in anticipation of production losses. Phillips
66 completed a shut-down of its Alliance refinery on Louisiana’s coast and PBF
Energy Inc. reduced its Chalmette, Louisiana, processing, people familiar with
the matter said. PBF did not reply to request for comment. 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.
^ It looks like Ida will be a
very dangerous storm for Louisiana. ^
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