Invest 98L to soak south Texas with heavy rain and potential flooding into the weekend
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CNN
14 minutes ago
- CNN
First major hurricane of the season intensifies to Category 5
Hurricane Erin has become a rare and 'catastrophic' Category 5 hurricane with sustained winds near 160 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center.
Yahoo
38 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Hurricane Erin, first of Atlantic season, strengthens to Cat 5
Erin exploded into a Category 5 hurricane on Saturday after rapidly strengthening over the Atlantic Ocean, the National Hurricane Center said. In an updated alert at 11:20 a.m. EDT, the Miami-based center said hurricane hunters found Erin had maximum sustained winds near 160 mph. A Category 5 hurricane is defined as having maximum sustained winds of 157 mph or higher. Erin, which grew from a tropical storm into a hurricane on Friday, is the first hurricane the 2025 Atlantic season. Forecasters have been urging people in the Caribbean islands to monitor Erin's progress, warning of the potential for heavy rainfall and life-threatening surf and rip current conditions. Erin is not currently forecast to impact the United States, but meteorologists continue to watch it closely. The center of Erin was forecast to move just north of the northern Leewards, the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico over the weekend, the hurricane center said. Rainfall totals of up to 6 inches are possible for those islands, with the potential of flash flooding and mudslides, the hurricane center said. Maps show Hurricane Erin's forecast path Forecasters expected Erin's path to curve northward, with the hurricane passing near the northern Leewards on Saturday. The northern Leewards stretch from the Virgin Islands to Guadeloupe and include St. Martin, St. Barts and other islands. Officials have issued tropical storm watches for several islands, alerting people of the possibility of winds ranging between 39 mph and 73 mph. A "spaghetti map" of the forecast models shows the storm pivoting to the north, skirting the islands and remaining well offshore of the U.S. East Coast. A high-pressure system in the Atlantic was expected to steer Erin away from the Eastern Seaboard while a cold front was also forecast to push the hurricane offshore, CBS News Bay Area meteorologist Jessica Burch reported. On the U.S. Virgin Islands, officials with the National Park Service announced that sites on the island of St. Croix would be closed starting late Friday afternoon until after the storm passes. First hurricane of the Atlantic season Erin formed as a tropical storm on Monday west of the island nation of Cabo Verde, a few hundred miles off Africa's western coast. It is the fifth named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season, which started in June and runs through November. So far this year, Tropical Storm Chantal is the only one to have made landfall in the U.S., bringing deadly flooding to North Carolina in early July. In June, Barry made landfall as a tropical depression on Mexico's eastern coast. Erin's increased strength comes as the Atlantic hurricane season approaches its peak in September. According to the hurricane center, most of the season's activity typically happens between mid-August and mid-October. In the eastern Pacific Ocean, hurricane season starts on May 15 with a peak in activity typically seen in late August. The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA, forecast an above-normal season for the Atlantic this year, expecting between 13 and 18 named storms. Tropical storms have maximum sustained winds of at least 39 mph. Forecasters with NOAA anticipated that between five and nine of the storms this year could become hurricanes, which have sustained winds of at least 74 mph. Hurricanes are rated on a scale based on their wind speeds, ranging from Category 1, the weakest, to Category 5, the most severe rating. NOAA forecasters predicted there could be between two and five major hurricanes in the Atlantic this season. Saturday Sessions: Lord Huron performs "Nothing I Need" Saturday Sessions: Lord Huron performs "Bag of Bones" Saturday Sessions: Lord Huron performs "Watch Me Go"


Los Angeles Times
an hour ago
- Los Angeles Times
Hurricane Erin explodes in strength to a Category 5 storm in the Caribbean
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Hurricane Erin exploded in strength to a Category 5 storm in the Caribbean on Saturday, rapidly powering up from a tropical storm in a single day, the National Hurricane Center said. Though the compact hurricane's center wasn't expected to hit land, it threatened to deliver flooding rains to Puerto Rico and other populated areas as it continued to grow. Mike Brennen, director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami, said Erin had swiftly grown into a 'very powerful hurricane,' racing from maximum sustained winds of 100 mph to 160 mph in a mere nine hours. 'We expect to see Erin peak here in intensity relatively soon,' Brennan said in an online briefing. The first Atlantic hurricane of 2025, Erin ramped up from a tropical storm to a Category 5 hurricane in 24 hours. By late Saturday morning, its maximum sustained winds more than doubled to 160 mph. The U.S. government has deployed more than 200 employees from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and other agencies to Puerto Rico as a precaution as forecasters issued a flood watch for the entire U.S. territory from late Friday into Monday. Puerto Rico Housing Secretary Ciary Pérez Peña said 367 shelters had been inspected and could be opened if needed. The U.S. Coast Guard said Friday that it closed six seaports in Puerto Rico and two in the U.S. Virgin Islands to all incoming vessels unless they had received prior authorization. The hurricane was 105 miles north of Anguilla at about 11 a.m. Saturday, moving west at 17 mph. The storm's center was forecast to remain at sea without hitting land, passing north of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Erin was close enough to affect nearby islands. Tropical storm watches were issued for St. Martin, St. Barts and St. Maarten. The National Hurricane Center warned that heavy rain in some areas could trigger flash flooding, landslides and mudslides. Tropical-storm-force wind gusts are possible in the Turks and Caicos Islands and southeast Bahamas. Officials in the Bahamas said they prepared some public shelters as a precaution as they urged people to track the hurricane. 'These storms are very volatile and can make sudden shifts in movement,' said Aarone Sargent, managing director for the Bahamian disaster risk management authority. Though compact in size, with hurricane-force winds extending 30 miles from its center, Erin was expected to double or even triple in size in the coming days, the National Hurricane Center said. That means the storm could create powerful rip currents off parts of the U.S. East Coast next week, even with its eye forecast to remain far offshore. Protruding U.S. coastal areas — such as North Carolina's Outer Banks, New York's Long Island and Cape Cod in Massachusetts — face a higher risk of direct and potentially severe tropical storm or hurricane conditions than much of the southern Atlantic, mid-Atlantic and northern New England coasts, AccuWeather said. Scientists have linked rapid intensification of hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean to climate change. Global warming is causing the atmosphere to hold more water vapor and is raising ocean temperatures. The warmer waters give hurricanes fuel to unleash more rain and strengthen more quickly. Storms that grow so quickly complicate forecasting for meteorologists and make it harder for government agencies to plan for emergencies. Hurricane Erick, a Pacific storm that made landfall June 19 in Oaxaca, Mexico, also strengthened rapidly, doubling in intensity in less than a day. Erin is the fifth named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, which runs from June 1 to Nov. 30. It's the first to become a hurricane. The 2025 hurricane season is expected to be unusually busy. The forecast calls for six to 10 hurricanes, with three to five reaching major status with winds of more than 110 mph. Coto writes for the Associated Press. AP writer Isabella O'Malley in Philadelphia contributed to this report.