World

Hurricane Ian pounds Florida as monster Category 4 storm

Video footage shows floodwaters surging into beachfront homes, submerging roads, sweeping away vehicles

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 29 Sep 2022 9:30AM

Hurricane Ian pounds Florida as monster Category 4 storm
Officials say Hurricane Ian was packing maximum sustained winds of 240km per hour when it landed, battering the Florida peninsula with catastrophic conditions – more than 1.1 million power outages were reported and that figure is expected to grow. – NOOA pic, September 29, 2022

PUNTA GORDA – Hurricane Ian slammed into the coast of southwest Florida as a monster Category 4 storm yesterday, bringing “catastrophic” storm surges, wind and flooding as officials readied a huge emergency response.

The United States Border Patrol said 20 migrants were missing after their boat sank, with four Cubans swimming to shore in the Florida Keys islands and three rescued at sea by the coast guard.

The National Hurricane Centre (NHC) said the eye of the “extremely dangerous” hurricane made landfall just after 3.00pm on the barrier island of Cayo Costa, west of the city of Fort Myers.

Dramatic television footage from the coastal city of Naples showed floodwaters surging into beachfront homes, submerging roads and sweeping away vehicles.

Some neighbourhoods in Fort Myers, which has a population of more than 80,000, resembled lakes.

The NHC said Ian was packing maximum sustained winds of 240km per hour when it landed, “battering the Florida peninsula with catastrophic” conditions. 

Florida’s Governor Ron DeSantis said that there were more than 1.1 million reported power outages in the state and that the figure is expected to grow.

In the three counties where the hurricane first hit, almost all power was down.

Ian is set to impact several million people across Florida and in the southeastern states of Georgia and South Carolina.

As hurricane conditions spread, forecasters warned of a once-in-a-generation calamity.

“This is going to be a storm we talk about for many years to come,” said National Weather Service director Ken Graham. 

“It’s a historic event.”

DeSantis said the state is going to experience a “nasty, nasty day, two days”.

Life-threatening

In Punta Gorda, north of Fort Myers, streets emptied as howling winds ripped fronds off palm trees and shook electricity poles.

Some 2.5 million people were under mandatory evacuation orders in a dozen coastal Florida counties, with several dozen shelters set up, and voluntary evacuation recommended in others.

For those who decided to ride out the storm, authorities stressed it was too late to flee and residents should hunker down and stay indoors.

Airports in Tampa and Orlando stopped all commercial flights and cruise ship companies delayed departures or cancelled voyages.

With up 61cm of rain expected to fall on parts of the so-called Sunshine State, and a storm surge that could reach devastating levels of 3.6m to 5.5m, authorities were warning of dire emergency conditions.

“This is a life-threatening situation,” the NHC warned.

The storm is set to move across central Florida before emerging in the Atlantic Ocean by late this evening.

‘Nothing left here’

Ian a day earlier had plunged all of Cuba into darkness after battering the country’s west as a Category 3 storm and downing the island’s power network.

“Desolation and destruction. These are terrifying hours. Nothing is left here,” a 70-year-old resident of the western city of Pinar del Rio was quoted as saying in a social media post by his journalist son, Lazaro Manuel Alonso.

At least two people died in Pinar del Rio province, Cuban state media reported.

In the United States, the Pentagon said 3,200 national guardsmen were called up in Florida, with another 1,800 on the way.

DeSantis said state and federal responders were assigning thousands of personnel to address the storm response.

“There will be thousands of Floridians who will need help rebuilding,” he said.

As climate change warms the ocean’s surface, the number of powerful tropical storms, or cyclones, with stronger winds and more precipitation is likely to increase.

The total number of cyclones, however, may not.

According to Gary Lackmann, a professor of atmospheric science at North Carolina State University, studies have also detected a potential link between climate change and rapid intensification – when a relatively weak tropical storm surges to a Category 3 hurricane or higher in a 24-hour period, as happened with Ian.

“There remains a consensus that there will be fewer storms, but that the strongest will get stronger,” Lackmann said. – AFP, September 29, 2022

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