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Monday, September 18, 2017

Hurricane Maria: storm strengthens as it heads towards battered Caribbean

Tristan Joseph stands among his family’s ruined possessions one week after Hurricane Irma destroyed his home in Charlotte Amalie, St Thomas, US Virgin Islands.
Another powerful storm was bearing down on a string of battered Caribbean islands on Sunday, with forecasters saying that Maria had strengthened into a hurricane and would intensify before hitting the Leeward Islands on Monday night.
Maria was about 275 miles (445km) east-southeast of the Leeward island of Dominica with maximum sustained winds of 75mph (100km/h) at 4pm (8pm GMT), the US National Hurricane Center said.
The forecaster said: “Maria ... could be near major hurricane intensity when it affects portions of the Leeward Islands over the next few days, bringing dangerous wind, storm surge and rainfall hazards.”
Maximum sustained winds were expected to accelerate to 120mph within 72 hours, by which time the hurricane could reach the British and US Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico, a US territory with a weakened economy and fragile power grid.
The government of Puerto Rico has already begun preparations for Maria, which is expected to make landfall there on Tuesday, officials said.
The storm is moving west-northwest at about 15mph (24km/h) and is expected to cross the Leeward Islands on Monday night, the NHC said.
Hurricane warnings were in place for the French island of Guadeloupe, Dominica, St Kitts, Nevis and Montserrat, while a hurricane watch was in effect for the US Virgin Islands, British Virgin Islands, Saba and St Eustatius, St Maarten, St Martin and St Barthelemy and Anguilla.
A tropical storm warning was in effect for Antigua and Barbuda, St Lucia and Martinique.
Pinterest
 The location and possible path of Hurricane Maria.
Maria is approaching the eastern Caribbean less than two weeks after Irma hammered the region before overrunning Florida. That powerful category 4 storm killed at least 84 people, more than half of them in the Caribbean.

The eye of Jose, with top sustained winds of 90 miles (150 km) per hour, should remain off the US east coast, the NHC said.The NHC also issued a tropical storm watch for portions of the US mid-Atlantic and New England coast by Tuesday as a second hurricane, Jose, moved slowly north from its current position in the Atlantic Ocean about 335 miles (535km) south-east of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina.
Even so, by Tuesday it could bring tropical storm conditions from Fenwick Island, Delaware, to Sandy Hook, New Jersey, and from East Rockaway Inlet on New York’s Long Island to the Massachusetts island of Nantucket.
Up to five inches (12cm) of rain could fall over parts of the area, and the storm could bring dangerous surf and rip currents as well.

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