Oman Daily Observer

Hurricane Michael threatens southern US

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MIAMI: Hurricane Michael strengthen­ed to a Category 2 storm with 100-mile-per-hour winds on Tuesday as Florida’s governor warned it could bring “total devastatio­n” to parts of the southern US state.

The storm — currently located over the Gulf of Mexico — is sweeping towards the Florida coast at around 12 miles per hour and is expected to make landfall on Wednesday, bringing with it “life threatenin­g” storm surges and heavy rainfall, the National Hurricane Centre said.

“It is a monstrous storm and the forecast (keeps) getting more dangerous,” Florida Governor Rick Scott said. “The time to prepare is now.”

It “poses a deadly threat and as it grows stronger, we can expect it make landfall as a major Category 3 storm,” said Scott, warning that it “could bring total devastatio­n to parts of our state, especially in the panhandle.”

A hurricane warning was up across the Florida panhandle, a low-lying area of beachfront resort and retirement communitie­s on northeaste­rn Gulf coast.

Forecaster­s warned of coastal flooding with storm surge and tides projected to raise water levels by as much as eight to 12 feet in some areas.

Rainfall of four to eight inches, and as much as a foot in isolated areas, “could lead to life-threatenin­g flash floods,” according to the NHC, which also warned that the storm’s approach could spawn tornados in northweste­rn Florida.

Michael was forecast to have the power to uproot trees, block roads and knock out power for days by the time it hits Florida on Wednesday. It is expected to weaken as it moves up into the southeaste­rn United States.

President Donald Trump, who was in Orlando delivering an address on Monday to a global associatio­n of police chiefs, said the federal government was ready and urged residents to be prepared for the worst.

“Can you believe it? It looks like another big one,” he said

The Carolinas are still recovering from Hurricane Florence, which left dozens dead and is estimated to have caused billions of dollars in damage last month.

It made landfall on the coast as a Category 1 hurricane on September 14 and drenched some parts of the state with 40 inches of rain.

Last year saw a string of catastroph­ic storms batter the western Atlantic — including Irma, Maria and Hurricane Harvey — causing a record-equaling $125 billion in damage when it flooded the Houston metropolit­an area.

Scientists have long warned that global warming will make cyclones more destructiv­e, and some say the evidence for this may already be visible.

At their most fearsome, these lowpressur­e weather fronts pack more power than the energy released by the atomic bomb that levelled Hiroshima.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Hurricane Michael is seen in this National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tions’s Geostation­ary Operationa­l Environmen­tal Satellite (NOAA GOES-EAST satellite) image in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday.
— Reuters Hurricane Michael is seen in this National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tions’s Geostation­ary Operationa­l Environmen­tal Satellite (NOAA GOES-EAST satellite) image in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday.

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