Record-breaking hurricane expected to make landfall on Tuesday with 160mph winds, while New Zealand reels from storm damage
Hurricane Melissa – follow latest updates live
The Caribbean is bracing for Hurricane Melissa, one of the most powerful to ever strike the region. Melissa began as a cluster of thunderstorms off the coast of west Africa, which travelled west and developed into a depression, reaching tropical storm status to the north of Venezuela on 21 October. Rapid intensification over the weekend strengthened Melissa to category 4 as it slowly meandered west through the Caribbean Sea.
Melissa reached category 5 intensity on Monday morning with sustained winds of 160mph (257km/h). Melissa is forecast to take a turn to the north-east towards Jamaica on Monday afternoon, making landfall on Tuesday by about midday, maintaining it’s current strength, which would make it the strongest of only five hurricanes ever recorded to hit Jamaica directly.
Melissa’s notably slow traversal – averaging barely 5mph in recent days – will exacerbate the impact, with extremely high rainfall along its path. Totals of 200-400mm (8in-16in) are likely across Jamaica by Tuesday evening, rising to 1,000mm in places.
Similar amounts are expected in south-eastern Cuba from late Tuesday and into Wednesday. In comparison, London and Paris receive about 650mm in a year, while Kingston in Jamaica averages just over 800mm.
The US National Hurricane Center has warned of “extensive infrastructure damage, long-duration power and communication outages and isolation of communities” in Jamaica and nearby islands, with the potential for life-threatening flash flooding, storm surges and landslides.
Meanwhile, two powerful storms battered New Zealand last week. The first, on Monday and Tuesday, was rapidly followed by an even more intense storm on Thursday. The second prompted rare red warnings for wind as gusts exceeded 90mph in several densely populated areas.
Damage included roofs torn from buildings and downed electricity poles; about 90,000 homes were without power on Thursday. Several schools, businesses and public buildings were shut in precaution. Several road and rail links were also closed, some as a result of flooding or landslides, while ferry services and hundreds of flights were disrupted or cancelled.
Sign up to Down to Earth
The planet’s most important stories. Get all the week’s environment news – the good, the bad and the essential
Winds were powerful enough to overturn a lorry travelling near Springfield and knock down shipping containers in the port of Dunedin. There was also extensive damage to trees, with one man known to have died after being hit by a falling branch while walking in a park in Wellington on Tuesday.
Source: www.theguardian.com
