Tuesday, September 24, 2024
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Tropical Storm Helene forms, forecast to hit U.S. as major hurricane – The Mercury

Tropical Storm Helene formed Tuesday morning in the Caribbean, and the National Hurricane Center forecasts it to move north and strike the United States as a major Category 3 hurricane on Thursday night.

Earlier Tuesday, the NHC issued hurricane watches for Florida’s Gulf Coast and warned storm surge could reach as high as 15 feet near its expected landfall.

In its 11 a.m. advisory, the system’s center was located in the northwest Caribbean Sea about 180 miles east-southeast of Cozumel, Mexico and 1780 miles south-southeast of the western tip of Cuba with maximum sustained winds of 45 mph as it moved northwest at 12 mph.

 

Tropical-storm-force winds extend out 140 miles from its center.

Forecasters predict it will become a hurricane by Wednesday in the Gulf of Mexico and then rapidly intensify into Thursday as it moves across the eastern Gulf of Mexico.

“It is going to be a big storm, and by big I mean not intensity, I mean size,” said NHC Deputy Director Jaime Rhome on Tuesday. “And big storms cause big problems. And that’s one of the take-home messages that I need you to understand.”

He noted tropical storm warnings and watches extending basically from the Florida Keys all the way around to the Panhandle and inland watches including Central Florida.

“The wind swath is going to be huge with this system, and it’s basically going to carve a path right over a good portion of the Florida peninsula, including the highly populated I-4 corridor,” he said. “So if you’re watching from Tampa and Orlando, you’re going to have a big wind event with this, no matter where it goes with respect to the track.”

The storm’s center could target Florida’s Big Bend region, similar to this year’s Hurricane Debby and 2023’s Hurricane Idalia, but could also still shift to the east near Tampa or west to the middle of Florida’s Panhandle.

“All indications are a significant hurricane impacting the Florida Big Bend, but, and this is a big but, the hazards are going to be well removed from the center and well removed from the cone,” Rhome said. “So I don’t want you to look at the cone and say, ‘I’m out of the cone,’ or ‘I’m on the edge of the cone,’ because this wind field, the wind field with this system, is going to be really large — larger than you’re used to seeing with a traditional hurricane.”

Gov. Ron DeSantis issued a state of emergency order Monday for 41 of Florida’s 67 counties, and increased that to 61 on Tuesday. He said during a press conference Tuesday morning that the state also asked for pre-landfall declaration from FEMA.

He said the NHC has never in its history had a forecast for a major hurricane for a system that has yet to even form.

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