Hurricane Erin sparks major waves and evacuations in North Carolina's Outer Banks
The storm was tracking northward, running roughly parallel to the east coast, according to the US's National Hurricane Center (NHC) in Miami. Though not projected to strike the mainland, Erin is expected to expand in size and generate hazardous rip currents in the upcoming days.
Officials in North Carolina's Outer Banks warned of coastal flooding, prompting evacuation orders.
Erin became the Atlantic's first hurricane of 2025, intensifying rapidly to a category 5 on Saturday before weakening. It then regained strength, knocked out power to more than 147,000 utility customers in Puerto Rico, and finally dropped to category 2 status on Tuesday morning.
The storm had sustained winds of 110 mph while moving north-west at 7 mph. Its center was located about 665 miles south-west of Bermuda and 720 miles south-south-east of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina.
The storm's rapid growth ranks it among the fastest-intensifying hurricanes ever observed in the Atlantic, highlighting scientists' warnings that the climate crisis – driven by greenhouse gas emissions caused by humans – is fueling more rapid storm strengthening.
Category 2 hurricanes carry sustained winds of 96 to 110mph. Erin was just shy of category 3, the threshold for what forecasters call a 'major' storm that is capable of severe destruction, with winds starting at 111mph.
Even without a direct hurricane warning, Hatteras and Ocracoke islands were ordered to evacuate. Officials fear that North Carolina state highway 12 (NC 12), the narrow route linking the communities, will be heavily damaged or swept away, leaving residents isolated for days or even weeks.
In the Outer Banks, roughly 3,500 locals are accustomed to occasional cutoffs from the mainland – but the tens of thousands of tourists currently visiting are not.
'We haven't seen waves of that size in a while and the vulnerable spots have only gotten weaker in the past five years,' Reide Corbett, executive director of the Coastal Studies Institute, told the Associated Press.
'Water, water everywhere. That really resonates on the Outer Banks,' Corbett said.
The northern areas around Nags Head and Kill Devil Hills, home to the region's densest development, are outside the evacuation zone. But to the south, across Oregon Inlet, lies Hatteras Island, which relies solely on NC 12 for access. Beyond that is Ocracoke Island, which can only be reached by plane or ferry.
Highways were first built there more than six decades ago. Since then, the remote fishing communities transformed into a booming tourist destination, now dotted with thousands of oversized vacation homes.
When storms strike, ocean and sound waters often breach dunes, burying the road under sand and debris. Severe events can tear apart pavement or carve out entirely new inlets, forcing temporary bridges.
Throughout the 2010s, the North Carolina department of transportation spent more than $1m annually just to keep NC 12 open, plus roughly $50m over the decade for storm-related repairs.
Despite the expense, Dare county generates about $2bn annually from tourism, ensuring that the cycle of rebuilding continues. But repairs are not quick. Hurricanes Isabel in 2003 and Irene in 2011 both created new inlets that required two months of ferry service until bridges were installed.
Rising sea levels, driven by climate change-related warming temperatures and melting ice, add to the danger. With much of the Outer Banks only a few feet above sea level, even minor erosion can have major effects, such as in Rodanthe, the community that juts furthest into the Atlantic.
Since 2020, more than a dozen homes in Rodanthe have collapsed into the sea. Authorities believe at least two more vacant houses could be lost if Erin's surf is as intense as predicted.
The Associated Press contributed reporting

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scientific American
23 minutes ago
- Scientific American
Why Hurricanes like Erin Trigger Rip Currents Hundreds of Miles Away
On August 19 Hurricane Erin is crawling past the Bahamas as a strong Category 2 storm and is due to head toward the Carolinas and then veer northeast over the open Atlantic Ocean. Although the storm's eye may never come within 300 miles of the mainland U.S., most of the East Coast—from Miami to Maine—is under a moderate or high risk of rip currents. In the U.S. rip currents cause about 100 fatal drownings each year and are responsible for four out of five beach rescues, according to a 2019 study. Here's the science behind how rip currents work, why hurricanes can cause them at such great distances from land and what beachgoers need to know about the threat. On supporting science journalism If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today. Rip Currents Explained Rip currents are a common phenomenon even without a hurricane roiling the distant ocean, says Melissa Moulton, a coastal physical oceanographer at the University of Washington. 'Rip currents are strong seaward currents that are caused by breaking waves,' she says. 'They can be as narrow as an alleyway or as wide as a multilane highway; they can last for just a few minutes or sometimes a number of hours.' At their fastest, they can beat an Olympic swimmer. These currents are an inevitable by-product of ocean physics on a complex shoreline, says Chris Houser, a coastal geomorphologist at the University of Waterloo in Ontario. Waves 'are constantly moving water toward that shoreline,' Houser says. That might sound obvious, but there's a corollary people may not think about too carefully, he adds: all that water has 'got to go somewhere.' That 'where' is back out to sea, and rip currents are one of the key routes by which water gets there. A rip current develops from variations in how waves break along a coastline, causing water from crashing waves to stay at the surface and flow sideways, then out to sea. (If the water instead travels down and straight back out, it forms an undertow, although the two terms are sometimes conflated.) Rip currents are more likely to develop when a coastline is more complex, in terms of either the visible shore—a feature such as a jetty or a rocky point can trigger rip currents—or the underwater topography of sandbars that raise the ocean floor. 'Over a shallow sandbar, you're getting larger breaking waves compared to, say, over a channel or a deeper spot,' says Greg Dusek, a coastal physical oceanographer at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. That creates variation in breaking waves and funnels outgoing water toward deeper areas that can form rip currents. The result is a misleading picture at the beach. 'You're looking along the shoreline, and you see areas of waves that are breaking and areas that are not breaking,' Houser says. 'You might actually think that the calm water is safest. It's probably a rip current.' (Although that doesn't mean the breaking waves are safe either.) Why Distant Hurricanes Trigger Rip Currents The picture becomes even more confusing when a hurricane passes far from shore, as Hurricane Erin is doing this week. With the stormy winds hundreds of miles away, conditions onshore might be gorgeous—but a hurricane can still make its presence known. Just as an earthquake can trigger a tsunami that crosses an entire ocean, even a distant hurricane can whip up beach surf. 'You might be standing on the beach, and it's a sunny day, no strong winds,' Moulton says. 'Because waves transport energy over very long distances very efficiently, we're not seeing the winds or anything from the hurricane, but we will see the wave energy.' The sizes of waves produced by a hurricane are determined by the sustained windspeeds inside the storm, the amount of ocean that the storm covers and the speed at which it travels. In general, faster winds, a larger area and slower movement tend to lead to taller waves that travel farther. When those waves hit a shoreline, they're more likely to trigger rip currents. 'The bigger the waves, the stronger the rip—if you have the physical conditions present for rips to be there,' Houser says. And the risk of rip currents can linger long after a storm has passed, Dusek warns. That's in part because the storm may have reshaped the visible or underwater topography of a beach. And when a distant storm is creating waves that are six or 10 feet tall, people typically know to stay out of the ocean. But when waves become a little less dramatic and local conditions are beautiful, it's more difficult to see the dangers of rip currents. Dusek expects that rip current risks along the East Coast could remain high through the rest of the week and perhaps into the weekend. That's particularly dangerous toward the end of summer, when people flock to the beach. 'In the wintertime, we have lots of winter storms up and down the East Coast, but rip currents aren't typically a concern because no one's swimming,' he says. How to Stay Safe from Rip Currents Moulton, Houser and Dusek all agree that staying safe from rip currents means following two guidelines: only swim at beaches where a lifeguard is present and obey any warnings from lifeguards or local officials about staying out of the water. 'If they have a red flag flying, it's not because they're being overly cautious,' Houser says. 'They are seeing something that you can't.' If you do happen to get caught in a rip current, Houser says, advice on what to do has changed in recent years. Officials used to recommend people try to swim parallel to shore to 'break the grip of the rip.' But in the heat of the moment, it's difficult to know which way is which, he says. So officials have pivoted to 'flip, float, follow.' 'Flip means don't put your feet down; flip so that your head is up and you are floating on your back,' Houser says. 'Then you start to follow the rip current. Allow it to take you slightly.' He's done this and says that, even with a floatation device, it's terrifying. But instead of wasting your strength against a fierce current, the strategy allows you to get your bearings and signal to a lifeguard while reducing the risk of drowning.
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Hurricane Erin: Northeast To See Coastal Flooding, Gusty Coastal Winds And Rip Currents
Hurricane Erin is expected to parallel the Eastern Seaboard through the remainder of this week, bringing the threat of rip currents, gusty conditions and coastal flooding to parts of the Northeast. Erin will stay well offshore, but the oversized hurricane will spread its influence to the Interstate-95 corridor on Thursday and Friday, before moving into the northern Atlantic this weekend. The biggest threat will be for rip currents on the Atlantic shores. This threat will be highest in the mid-Atlantic to Long Island on Wednesday, but is likely to spread northward along the coast through the rest of the week. Scores of people have already been rescued from North Carolina rip currents. (MORE: What A Life Guard Wants You To Know About Rip Currents) Encompassing all of a hurricane's hazards, rip currents and rough seas have historically made up one-in-six of direct hurricane deaths. It is best to just stay out of the Atlantic this week. Rip currents can occur even if it is not raining or even windy in your location. Waves will become increasingly choppy from south to north as Erin makes its way northward. Breaking waves of 5-15 feet are possible from the Jersey Shore to Long Island. Some coastal flooding is also possible at high tide, especially in favored locations that typically flood in impactful weather events. While Erin will not make landfall, it could bring gusty winds Thursday into Friday along the Eastern Seaboard. Some seaside locations could see gusts over 40 mph for short periods. Isolated power outages are possible. The biggest reason that this hurricane will bring impacts to the coast is that Erin's size is expected to grow tremendously before Friday. Erin's diameter of tropical storm force winds will grow from 340 miles across to 550 miles across between Tuesday afternoon and Friday morning. This expansion stirs up more of the ocean and atmosphere and moves more water toward the U.S. Coastline. Jonathan Belles has been a digital meteorologist for for 9 years and also assists in the production of videos for The Weather Channel en español. His favorite weather is tropical weather, but also enjoys covering high-impact weather and news stories and winter storms. He's a two-time graduate of Florida State University and a proud graduate of St. Petersburg College.


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Which beaches are closed due to Hurricane Erin? Here's what we know
Beachgoers in multiple East Coast states are being advised to take extreme caution as large waves and life-threatening surf and rip current conditions from Hurricane Erin are expected over the next couple of days. Evacuations were underway along parts of North Carolina's Outer Banks, a big draw for vacationers every summer. With Erin's expected storm surge and waves of over 10 feet, the National Weather Service is urging people to stay out of the ocean to avoid deadly surf conditions expected through at least Aug. 21. Officials in Dare County, North Carolina, declared a state of emergency, effective as of 6 p.m. ET on Aug. 17, and issued a mandatory evacuation for Hatteras Island. "While Hurricane Erin is expected to stay well off our coast, the system will continue to increase in size and is forecast to bring life-threatening impacts to the Dare County coastline," officials said in an Aug. 17 news release. "Coastal flooding and ocean overwash are expected to begin as early as Tuesday, Aug. 19 and continue through Thursday, Aug. 21," officials said, noting that portions of North Carolina Highway 12 on Hatteras Island will likely be "impassable" for several days. Cape Hatteras National Seashore said in a news release on Aug. 18 that it had closed beach accesses and facilities, adding that visitors should "stay off the beaches completely and discontinue use of all beach trails and boardwalks beginning Tuesday morning." In neighboring Hyde County, a mandatory evacuation order went into effect Aug. 19 for Ocracoke Island. Authorities in North Carolina said about 60 people had to be rescued from rip currents at Wrightsville Beach, prompting a no-swim order through the rest of the week, according to the Wilmington Star-News, part of the USA TODAY Network. Another individual was rescued from rip currents at a South Carolina beach, and a dozen rip currents were reported at South Carolina and Georgia beaches on Aug. 18, the National Weather Service in Charleston, South Carolina, said. Beaches in Delaware and along the Jersey Shore were closed to swimmers on Aug. 19, with closures affecting beaches such as Wildwood, Margate and Bay Head. At Island Head Beach State Park in Berkeley Township, New Jersey, swimming, surfing, boogie boarding, mobile sport fishing vehicle permit access and nature center programs are suspended through at least Aug. 21. New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy urged visitors and residents to avoid wading or swimming in the ocean, citing the dangerous rip currents and high waves. How to stay safe from rip currents Rip currents kill dozens in the United States every year, according to data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Since 2010, more than 800 people have died in rip current drownings. As of late July, at least 52 people died from surf zone dangers, nearly half of which were rip current drownings, the data shows. A rip current is a fast-moving channel of water that flows away from the shore and can drag a swimmer out into the ocean. The narrow, strong currents flow quickly and perpendicular to the coastline. Rip currents are so dangerous because they can catch swimmers off guard and cause them to panic while trying to swim to shore. The exertion causes fatigue before they can break free from the current, which continues to pull them out, experts say. According to officials, you should check for any warnings before entering the water and keep an eye on the weather and water conditions. Additionally, always swim near a lifeguard. If you do end up caught in a rip current, try to remain calm. The current won't pull you under; it will just pull you away from the shore. Don't swim against the current, because you'll risk tiring yourself out; instead, swim parallel to the shore and then swim back to land at an angle once you're free of the current. If you see someone else struggling in a rip current, you should try to get help from a lifeguard, according to NOAA's Rip Current Survival Guide. You can also throw something that floats to the person while you find a lifeguard. If there is no lifeguard on duty, call 911. Do not enter the water to try to help; experts say people who try to help often get caught in rip currents themselves.