• E-mail
  • Print
  • Comment
  • Font Size
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Discuss article

Rita heads for Texas as Category 5 hurricane

Posted on: Wednesday, 21 September 2005, 22:20 CDT

By Mark Babineck

GALVESTON, Texas (Reuters) - Hurricane Rita strengthened on Wednesday into a powerful, intensely dangerous Category 5 storm as it headed toward the Texas coast and prompted evacuation orders for more than a million people.

The storm had grown into the third most intense Atlantic hurricane on record as measured by internal pressure, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

The hurricane center said Rita was "a potentially catastrophic" Category 5 hurricane with maximum sustained winds rising to 175 mph (281 kph) over the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico. That matched the peak strength over water of last month's devastating Hurricane Katrina, which hit land as a Category 4 storm with 145-mph (233-kph) winds.

A hurricane watch was issued for the U.S. Gulf Coast from Fort Mansfield Texas, to Cameron, Louisiana. Rita was expected to come ashore late on Friday or early on Saturday as a "major hurricane ... at (Category 3) or higher," hurricane center forecaster Robbie Berg said.

President George W. Bush declared emergencies for Texas and Louisiana.

"Federal, state and local governments are coordinating their efforts to get ready," said Bush, who was heavily criticized for an ill-prepared federal response to Hurricane Katrina last month that killed more than 1,000 people.

"We hope and pray that Hurricane Rita will not be a devastating storm, but we've got to be ready for the worst," Bush said.

Rita lashed the Florida Keys on Tuesday but did little damage to the vulnerable Florida islands.

Rita's path included the Texas coast southwest of Galveston, where in 1900 at least 8,000 people died in the deadliest recorded U.S. hurricane.

Just last month, Hurricane Katrina devastated parts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama and killed at least 1,037 people.

Financial markets reacted immediately to news the storm had gained strength, with the prospect of more destruction and oil-supply interruptions affecting everything from stocks and the dollar to oil prices.

MASSIVE EVACUATION ORDERED

Galveston, a city of about 58,000 people located on a barrier island, began evacuating residents on Tuesday. More than 50 miles inland, Houston Mayor Bill White ordered an evacuation of residents in areas prone to storm surges or major floods.

Officials said as many as 1.2 million people were expected to start leaving Houston, America's fourth most populous city with about 2 million residents and an international center for the oil industry. The city was the most popular destination for evacuees from Katrina, which displaced about 1 million people, including nearly all of New Orleans's 450,000 residents.

Stores in Houston quickly ran out of emergency supplies, plywood and food. The last major hurricane to hit Houston was Alicia in 1983, a Category 3 storm that killed 22 people. Tropical Storm Allison in 2001 caused extensive flooding in the city and killed more than 40 people across the United States.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry urged Texans along a 300-mile (483 km) stretch comprising most of the state's coastline, to leave. He said nursing home residents already were being evacuated.

The Mexican government issued a tropical storm watch for the country's northeast coast from Rio San Fernando northward.

"Everyone's scared, that's why we're all leaving," Galveston Island resident Maria Stephens said, citing television images of Katrina's devastation. "I saw the people at the shelters and the bodies floating in the water. I don't want that to be my family."

NASA prepared to evacuate its Johnson Space Center in Houston and turn over control of the International Space Station to its Russian partners.

About 1,100 Katrina evacuees still in Houston's two mass shelters were being sent to Fort Chaffee, Arkansas. Some Houston hospitals were evacuated.

New Orleans, flooded by Katrina, was taking no chances. Mayor Ray Nagin said two busloads of people had been evacuated already and 500 other buses were ready.

State officials said an estimated 9,700 residents of Cameron Parish on the Louisiana-Texas border were told to leave. They added that 2,662 people housed in shelters after Katrina were relocated to facilities farther north in the state, and 5,054 more were expected to be moved.

A FEMA spokesman said Rita was not expected to re-flood New Orleans if the storm stayed on its current westward course.

GOVERNMENTS, OIL INDUSTRY RESPOND

At 11 p.m. EDT (0300 GMT), Rita's center was about 570 miles east-southeast of Galveston and moving toward the west near 9 mph (14 kph), the hurricane center said.

Taking lessons from problems after Katrina hit, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said authorities had positioned supplies and were checking on communications systems. The government sent Coast Guard Rear Adm. Larry Hereth to Texas to coordinate the response.

"I hope that by doing what the state officials and mayors are doing now ... getting people who are invalids out of the way, encouraging people to leave early, that when the storm hits, there will be property damage but hopefully there won't be a lot of people to rescue," Chertoff told MSNBC.

Oil companies just starting to recover from Katrina evacuated Gulf oil rigs as Rita moved closer. Four Texas refineries were shut down, even as four refineries remained shut in Louisiana and Mississippi after Katrina.

Together with the 5 percent of U.S. refinery capacity shut since Katrina, the four closed Texas refineries add up to about 11.5 percent of U.S. oil refining.

A U.S. energy official said the risk of flooding at the Texas refineries was less than what Katrina posed in Louisiana, because they were on higher ground.

U.S. light crude oil rose $1.15 per barrel to $67.35. The dollar weakened and U.S. stock prices amid concerns about the storm's impact on energy costs and consumer spending.

(Additional reporting by Erwin Seba in Houston, Adam Entous and Caren Bohan in Washington, and Allan Dowd in Baton Rouge)


Source: REUTERS

More News in this Category


Related Articles



Rate this article:
1/52/53/54/55/5

User Comments (0)

Comment on this article

Your Name
Text from the image
Comment
max 1200 chars
* All fields are required


redOrbit Friends