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Sally makes landfall in Alabama as a Category 2 hurricane

2020-09-16T10:17:18.974Z


Hurricane Sally made landfall near Gulf Shores, Alabama, with winds of up to 105 miles per hour, according to the National Hurricane Center (NHC). The center warns that its slow movement will bring flooding of up to 30 inches. About 150,000 homes were without power.


Hurricane Sally made landfall at 4:45 a.m. this Wednesday, near

Gulf Shores, Alabama,

as a Category 2 hurricane, with winds of up to 105 miles per hour, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) warned. .

Sally threatens

"catastrophic and dangerous" floods, up to 30 inches,

"which are life-threatening," according to NHC experts.

As it passes through Alabama and Florida, it has already caused severe flooding and power outages. 

About

150,000 homes and businesses

were

without power

in the early hours of Wednesday.

Experts expect an

extremely dangerous

, life-

threatening storm surge

from eastern Louisiana to western Florida.

They also warn of possible tornadoes.

There is a hurricane watch from eastern St. Louis Bay, Mississippi, to Walton County, Florida.

[How and when to prepare for a hurricane or tropical storm]

In the coastal city of Gulf Shores, Alabama, there is a

curfew

due to conditions.

In Escambia County, Florida's Panhandle region, Agent Chip Simmons promised to keep his agents out and protect residents for as long as possible.

“It is not the intensity of #Sally that should be of concern.

It is the

duration

”, the meteorologists of The Weather Channel warned this Tuesday.

[The hurricane season was expected to be intense: it will be even worse]

One of Sally's peculiarities is

the slowness

with which it moves (3 mph), a characteristic that increases the risk of

severe flooding, or “record”

as the NHC warns, as this implies that the hurricane stays longer in the regions around that goes through.

"Sally is another example of a tropical cyclone that can have a serious impact even when it does not meet the official definition of a major hurricane," which are those with a category greater than 3, said meteorologists from The Weather Channel.

[Dos and don'ts during and after a hurricane]

Heavy rains, waves and flash flooding hit parts of the Florida Panhandle and the Alabama coast Tuesday as the hurricane plodded landward at a very slow pace.

Stacy Stewart, a senior specialist at the hurricane center, told the AP news agency that flooding could be deadly.

"People who live near rivers, streams and streams, should

evacuate

and go to another place," he warned.

Hurricane Sally is moving slowly through the Gulf and they fear it will strengthen before making landfall

Sept.

15, 202002: 32

Since Monday, President Donald Trump has issued emergency statements for parts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, tweeting that residents should listen to state and local leaders.

Forecasters have warned that Sally could trigger flooding similar to those caused by

Hurricane Harvey in 2017

when it flooded the greater Houston area.

Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves urged people in the southern part of the state to prepare for the possibility of flash floods.

She said about 120 people turned to shelters in Mississippi.

The NHC also noted that

Teddy

became a hurricane early Wednesday morning, now reaching Category 2 with

100 mph

winds

.

Although the meteor is still far away: 820 miles from the Lesser Antilles.

Climate change is causing fiercer hurricanes

Sally is the strongest of the five phenomena that coincide in the Atlantic, something that has not happened since 1971. In addition to this phenomenon, meteorologists monitor Teddy, Paulette, Karina and Vicky.

[Trump travels to California and ignores the role of climate change in the fires that sweep the West Coast]

The current hurricane season is being particularly

busy,

as is the catastrophic wildfire season on the West Coast.

The severe weather situation has refocused attention on the

role of climate change.

Scientists say that global warming is causing the strongest hurricanes, those with wind speeds of 110 mph or more, to become even stronger.

Warmer air holds more moisture, which makes storms rainier.

For its part, the

rise in sea level due to global warming

makes the swells higher and more damaging.

With information from AP and NHC.

Source: telemundo

All news articles on 2020-09-16

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