Miami: Tropical Hurricane Nicholas headed to Texas Beach Sunday night, threatened to bring heavy rain and flooding to the coastal area of Texas, Mexico and Louisiana which was battered storm.
Forecasters in the national storm center in Miami said the storm watch was issued for the central part of the Texas coast with most of the state coastline now under the warning of tropical storms.
Nicholas is expected to approach the Central Texas beach Monday night and can bring heavy rain which can cause flash floods and urban floods.
Nicholas for several days is expected to produce total rainfall of up to 10 inches (25 centimeters) in Texas and Southwest Louisiana, with a maximum amount of isolated 20 inches (50 centimeters), cross portion of the Texas coast starting in the middle of the week.
Texas GOV.
Greg Abbott said the state had placed the team and resource rescue in the Houston area and along the Texas Gulf Coast.
“This is a storm that can make heavy rain, and wind and maybe floods, in various regions along the Gulf Coast.
We urge you to listen to local weather warnings, pay attention to local warnings,” Abbot said in a video message.
Louisiana Gov.
John Bel Edwards on Sunday night declared an emergency ahead of the arrival of a storm in the state that was still recovering from Ida’s storm and was historic last year.
“The most severe threat to Louisiana is in the southwestern part of the country, where recovery from Hurricane Laura and the flood may be ongoing.
In this area heavy rain and flooding flooding maybe.
However, it is also possible that all South Louisiana will see heavy rain this week, Including areas that have just been influenced by the Ida storm, “Edwards said.
At 11pm EDT, the center of the storm was expected to pass away or just off the coast of Northeast Coast Mexico and South Texas on Monday, and hit South Texas or the middle on Monday night or early Tuesday.
The sustainable maximum wind is a clock at 40 mph (65 kph) and moves north at 2 mph (4 kph), although it is expected to increase in the speed of Monday morning.
Gradually reinforcement is possible until it reaches the coast of Monday night or early Tuesday.
The storm is expected to bring the toughest rainfall to the west where the Ida storm slams to Louisiana two weeks ago.
Although the forecast did not expect Louisiana to suffer from strong winds, Bob Henson’s meteorological experts on Yale’s climate connection predicted rainfall could still tarnish places where the storm rolled the house, paralyzed electricity infrastructure and water and went at least 26 people.
“There may be some inches of rain across Southeast Louisiana, where Ida struck,” Henson said in an email.
In all of Louisiana, 140,198 customers, or around 6.3% of the countries still have no power on Sunday morning, according to the Louisiana Public Service Commission.
The storm is projected to move slowly on the beach that can remove the amount of heavy rain for several days, said Meteorologist Donald Jones from national weather services in Lake Charles, Louisiana.
“Heavy rain, flash floods seem to be the biggest threat in our region,” he said.
While Lake Charles received a minimum impact of IDA, the city saw many Wallops from Hurricane Laura and Hurricane Delta in 2020, winter storms in February and historical floods this spring.
“We are still a very obsolete city,” said Lake Charles Major Nic Hunter.
He said the city took the threat of a serious storm, because of all tropical systems.
“Hope and prayer are not a good game plan,” Hunter said.
In the Cameron parish on the coast of Louisiana, Scott’s side still finished repairs at his damaged house from Hurricane Laura last year who put about 2 feet of water at his home.
He hopes to have finished with Christmas.
He said many in his area had moved instead of rebuilding.
“If you make your butt whipping around four times, you will not rise again.
You will go somewhere else,” said the ban.
Colorado State University Hurricane Researcher Phil Klotzbach said via Twitter that Nicholas was the 14th named Storm from the 2021 Atlantic storm season.
Only 4 others since 1966 have 14 or more storms named on September 12, 2005, 2011, 2012, and 2020.