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Tropical storm Lee threatens Gulf of Mexico
by Staff Writers
Miami (AFP) Sept 2, 2011

A tropical storm brewing in the Gulf of Mexico threatens to dump heavy rains and dangerous flash floods across a large swath of the southern United States, the National Weather Service warned Friday.

Oil companies evacuated workers from offshore rigs ahead of the arrival of Lee while Louisiana's governor Bobby Jindal declared a state of emergency, urging residents to "prepare for the worst and hope for the best."

The slow-moving storm could bring the same kind of flooding that residents in the northeast are still grappling with after Hurricane Irene tore up the east coast last weekend, officials warned.

Irene affected more than 40 million people, was blamed for nearly 50 deaths, triggered historic flooding and caused what one risk assessment firm estimated to be more than $10 billion in damage before blowing itself out over Canada.

The biggest danger from Tropical Storm Lee -- the 12th named storm of the Atlantic season, which is already dumping rain across coastal Louisiana -- could be in the Appalachians.

"If we get the five to 10 inches that come out into a tropical storm in that kind of terrain, the flash flooding is fast and it's violent," Bill Read, director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami, told reporters.

With some areas forecast to receive up to 20 inches of rain over the Labor Day holiday weekend, residents in low-lying areas from Louisiana and Mississippi all the way up to Kentucky and Tennessee should prepare themselves for extensive flooding, he cautioned.

It could also bring isolated tornados.

Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour declared a state of emergency in several counties, urging residents to prepare well in advance.

"Do not underestimate the impact of this system of tropical weather," he said.

The weather service is also monitoring the strengthening of Hurricane Katia, which had been downgraded to a tropical storm earlier in the week but regained hurricane status Friday after passing over warmer water.

Forecast models vary, and Katia is still well out to sea, but several tracks show the hurricane taking aim at the US eastern seaboard sometime next week.

The current hurricane could clip islands ringing the eastern Caribbean this weekend, with the NHC warning that Katia would send "life-threatening surf" barreling into the Lesser Antilles later Friday.

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Katia regains hurricane strength over Atlantic: US
Miami (AFP) Sept 2, 2011 - Hurricane Katia reformed over the Atlantic on Friday, US forecasters said, as the now-strengthening storm churned westward toward a possible collision with the US East Coast late next week.

"Katia regains hurricane status" with sustained winds of 75 miles (120 kilometers) per hour, the Miami-based National Hurricane Center said in its latest bulletin.

The NHC said Katia, now a category one hurricane on the five-level Saffir-Simpson wind scale, was chugging along at 14 miles per hour.

While its westward movement was expected to slow, forecasters predicted the storm would gather strength in the coming 48 hours.

Forecast models vary, and Katia is still well out to sea, but several tracks show the hurricane taking aim at the US eastern seaboard, parts of which are still suffering the crippling effects of Hurricane Irene, which slammed the densely populated region a week ago.

Irene affected more than 40 million people, was blamed for nearly 50 deaths, triggered historic flooding and caused what one risk assessment firm estimated to be more than $10 billion in damage before blowing itself out over Canada.

The current hurricane could clip islands ringing the eastern Caribbean this weekend, with the NHC warning that Katia would send "life-threatening surf" barreling into the Lesser Antilles later Friday.

Katia, the 11th named storm of the Atlantic season, had been downgraded to a tropical storm earlier in the week but regained its hurricane status after passing over warmer water.





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SHAKE AND BLOW
Tropical Storm Nanmadol weakens, hits China
Shanghai (AFP) Aug 31, 2011
Tropical storm Nanmadol made landfall in southern China early Wednesday, bringing heavy rain, the government said, but there were no reports of casualties. Nanmadol killed at least 16 people in the Philippines over the weekend and on Monday a motorcyclist was killed in Taiwan, where landslides also trapped more than 300 people in a remote village. But the storm had weakened by the time i ... read more


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