TALLAHASSEE - Hurricane Michael
howled closer to Florida's Gulf shore on Tuesday as a major
Category 3 storm, as half a million coastal residents were urged
to seek higher ground on the eve of a landfall forecast to bring
towering waves and roof-shredding winds.
Michael is projected to plow into Florida's Panhandle at
midday on Wednesday, unleashing potentially devastating waves
as high as 13 feet (4 meters) that could rush inland for miles
around the storm's centre, the National Hurricane Center (NHC)
warned.
By late Tuesday, Michael was causing major disruptions to
U.S. oil-and-gas production as it churned north, gathering
greater strength over warm Gulf of Mexico waters.
President Donald Trump declared a state of emergency for the
entire state of Florida, freeing up federal assistance to
supplement state and local disaster responses.
The last NHC report said the storm was about 200 miles (325
km) from shore and packing sustained winds of up to 125 miles
per hour (205 km per hour), after jumping from a Category 2 to
Category 3 on the five-step Saffir-Simpson wind scale.
Winds of that magnitude can inflict substantial damage to
roofs and walls of even well-constructed homes, according to the
National Weather Service. Forecasters said the storm could also
spawn tornadoes over parts of Florida and Georgia.
NHC Director Ken Graham said Michael represented a "textbook
case" of a hurricane system growing stronger as it drew near
shore, in contrast to Hurricane Florence, which struck North
Carolina last month after weakening in a slow, halting approach.
Forecasts Tuesday night called for Michael to further
intensify into a Category 4 storm, defined as a hurricane with
winds of at least 130 mph (209 kph), before making landfall.
Hurricane-force winds extend about 40 miles from the center,
with tropical storm-force winds reaching 185 miles, Graham said.
The storm is likely to dump prodigious amounts of rain over
Florida, Alabama and Georgia, as well as the Carolinas - still
reeling from post-Florence flooding - and into Virginia. Up to a
foot of rainfall (30 cm) is forecast for some areas.
"This is a storm that is going to be life-threatening in
several ways," said Bo Patterson, the mayor of Port St. Joe,
Florida, whose small beachfront town lies directly in the
storm's projected path.
Florida Governor Rick Scott said Michael was expected to be
"the most deadly, destructive storm to the Panhandle in
decades."
The region should brace for "major infrastructure damage,"
specifically to electricity distribution, wastewater treatment
systems and transportation networks, Jeff Byard, associate
administrator for the Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA), told reporters on a conference call.
Byard said an estimated 500,000 people were under evacuation
orders and advisories in Florida, where residents and tourists
were fleeing low-lying areas in at least 20 counties stretching
along 200 miles (322 km) of shore in the Panhandle and adjacent
Big Bend region.
Among them was Betty Early, 75, a retiree who joined about
300 fellow evacuees huddled on makeshift bedrolls of blankets
and collapsed cardboard boxes at an elementary school converted
into an American Red Cross shelter in Panama City, near the
storm's expected landfall.
She was unsure how well her old, wood-framed apartment block
would hold up. "I'm blessed to have a place to come," she told
Reuters. "My greatest concern is not having electricity, and
living on a fixed income, losing my food."
THIS STORM COULD KILL YOU
A hurricane warning was posted along more than 300 miles
(483 km) of the coast from the Florida-Alabama border south to
the Suwannee River.
"If you don't follow warnings from officials this storm
could kill you," said Scott, a Republican running for the U.S.
Senate in November's congressional elections.
While the swiftly moving storm is not expected to linger
over Florida for long, widespread heavy downpours will likely
track inland to flood-stricken areas of the Carolinas even as
rain-gorged rivers there begin to recede, National Weather
Service meteorologist Ken Widelski told the conference call.
"The last thing we need is more water," said Carolyn Causey,
business manager of the Trinity United Methodist Church in
Conway, South Carolina. Floodwaters from Florence destroyed two
of the church's buildings and gutted three others.
Some of the storm's most significant early impact was to
offshore energy production. U.S. producers in the Gulf cut oil
production by about 40% and natural gas output by 28% on Tuesday, the Bureau of Safety and Environmental
Enforcement said.
Scott declared a state of emergency in 35 Florida counties,
mostly encompassing rural areas known for small tourist cities,
beaches, wildlife reserves and Tallahassee, the state capital.
Georgia Governor Nathan Deal declared a state of emergency
on Tuesday for 92 counties in his state.
About 2 500 National Guard troops were deployed to assist
with evacuations and storm preparations, and more than 4 000
others were on standby.
Some 17 000 utility restoration workers
were also on call.
In Panhandle counties, most state offices, schools and
universities were closed for the rest of the week. Lines at
gasoline stations grew as people left. Those who stayed emptied
grocery store shelves of water and other supplies.
The last major hurricane to hit the Panhandle was Hurricane
Dennis in 2005, according to hurricane center data.
Torrential downpours and flash flooding from the storm over
the weekend caused 13 deaths in Central America.