Sunday, 22 Sep 2024

Hurricane Ida roars towards Louisiana with winds of 241kmh

WASHINGTON (BLOOMBERG) – Hurricane Ida gained power rapidly on Sunday (Aug 29) as it crossed the Gulf of Mexico on its way to smashing into Louisiana, threatening to unleash mass flooding and destruction in New Orleans.

The Category 4 hurricane has top winds of 241kmh, the National Hurricane Centre said at 7am local time. Only two other storms on record have made landfall in Louisiana with winds that powerful.

“I feel sick to my stomach watching,” Mr Eric Blake, a forecaster at the National Hurricane Centre wrote on Twitter. “This is a very sobering morning.”

Ida is barrelling into New Orleans on the 16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, one of the most devastating natural disasters in United States history.

When it hits on Sunday, the storm will be the biggest test yet of the region’s levees and infrastructure that were rebuilt after Katrina.

Ida, poised to come ashore just south-west of New Orleans, is expected to drive ocean levels up by as much as 4.9m and dump 610mm of rain. Winds will be strong enough to rip roofs from houses and snap trees and power poles. Blackouts could last weeks.

Forecasters expect the storm to grow even stronger as it approaches. It is currently set to bring the most powerful winds to Louisiana, based on records going back to 1851, and its central pressure rivals Katrina, according to Dr Phil Klotzbach a hurricane researcher at Colorado State University.

If Ida’s winds gain just a little more power, it could become a Category 5 storm, said Dr Todd Crawford, director of meteorology at commercial forecaster Atmospheric G2. Only four Category 5 storms have hit the contiguous US.

In addition to Ida, the hurricane centre is tracking four more potential storms in the Atlantic and Hurricane Nora, which is raking Mexico’s Pacific coast.

New Orleans has asked residents to evacuate or take shelter. The levee gates are closed in many areas, hospital wards have been cleared out, oil refineries and offshore production have shut down, and thousands of people have fled.

The storm could damage close to one million homes along the coast, according to CoreLogic. It is forecast to run directly over chemical plants, refineries and the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port. All told, damage and losses could exceed US$40 billion (S$53.8 billion), said Mr Chuck Watson, a disaster modeller at Enki Research.

“It could be catastrophic,” said lead meteorologist Jim Rouiller at the Energy Weather Group.

As at Sunday, 537 flights had been cancelled in New Orleans, Dallas, and Houston through Monday, according to FlightAware, an airline tracking service.

Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport was thronged with local residents lining up for outbound flights or trying to rent vehicles to flee the city. Queues at rental car kiosks were hours long.


Traffic moving bumper-to-bumper as residents evacuate Louisiana towards Texas ahead of Hurricane Ida, on Aug 28, 2021. PHOTO: REUTERS

President Joe Biden has declared a state of emergency for Louisiana. New Orleans is below sea level and depends on levees and pumps to keep the ocean and river out.

The Mississippi River in downtown New Orleans has already risen about 61cm from Saturday and is forecast to rise 1.2m higher later on Sunday, said the National Weather Service.

Even if the levee system holds and keeps the surge at bay, New Orleans could face a major flood risk from the rain alone, said Dr Ryan Truchelut, president of Weather Tiger.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has deployed about 2,500 people to Louisiana and states including Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi and Texas.


Men boarding up a storefront with plywood ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Ida, in New Orleans, Louisiana, on Aug 28, 2021. PHOTO: REUTERS

Oil explorers are bracing themselves for the storm and have already halted the equivalent of more than 1.2 million barrels of daily crude production. Royal Dutch Shell, BP and others are shutting offshore platforms and evacuating crews.

The Gulf is home to 16 per cent of US crude production, 2 per cent of its natural gas output, and 48 per cent of the nation’s refining capacity.

After Ida comes ashore, it could also flood cotton, corn, soya bean and sugarcane crops, said Mr Don Keeney, a meteorologist with commercial forecaster Maxar.

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