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Hurricane Erin eyes the East Coast with dangerous surf and potential flooding

Hurricane Erin eyes the East Coast with dangerous surf and potential flooding

NBC News2 hours ago
NBC News' Aaron Gilchrist reports from the Outer Banks tonight as residents brace for Hurricane Erin's impact. This comes as dangerous surf forces closures along the East Coast.Aug. 20, 2025
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Hurricane Erin threatens N.C. with tropical storm conditions
Hurricane Erin threatens N.C. with tropical storm conditions

Axios

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  • Axios

Hurricane Erin threatens N.C. with tropical storm conditions

"Large" Hurricane Erin's storm surge began threatening the North Carolina Outer Banks on Wednesday, prompting officials to close a section of Highway 12. The big picture: The National Hurricane Center warned U.S. East Coast beachgoers on Wednesday against swimming at most beaches due to "life-threatening surf and currents," while the N.C. Outer banks was also under threat from "life-threatening" surge flooding and tropical conditions. Many East Coast beaches have already closed in preparation for the storm and N.C. is under a state of emergency. Evacuation orders were in effect for Dare and Hyde counties. Threat level: A storm surge warning was in effect for Cape Lookout to Duck, N.C., and a tropical storm warning was in effect for North Carolina's Beaufort Inlet to Chincoteague, Virginia, including Pamlico and Albemarle sounds. While the now-Category 2 hurricane was not forecast to make landfall in the U.S., forecasters warn much of the East Coast is under threat from the large storm's hurricane-force winds, which the NHC noted in a 5pm Wednesday ET advisory extended outward up to 105 miles from the center. Its tropical-storm-force winds extended outward up to 265 miles. Areas facing the dangerous conditions include beaches of the Bahamas, much of the East Coast, Bermuda and Atlantic Canada, and tropical storm conditions are expected Thursday on the Virginia coast, according to the NHC. Coastal flood warnings were in effect for the Atlantic coast of Maryland, Virginia, Nebraska and N.C., and along the bay south of the York River, the National Weather Service's Wakefield, Virginia, office said on X Wednesday evening. "Also, Wind Advisories have been issued for Hampton, Norfolk, Chesapeake, and Pasquotank/Camden NE NC." What they're saying: Erin had maximum sustained winds of about 110 mph, with outer rain bands moving just offshore of the coast of N.C., NHC director Mike Brennan said just after 5pm Wednesday ET That's "where conditions are going to quickly deteriorate as we go through the next several hours and into the overnight," he said. "Just a reminder though, that we have this broad risk of dangerous surf and rip current conditions along the entire U.S. coast because of the large size of Erin," Brennan said, adding it's not going to be safe to be at beaches through the week. State of play: Hurricane Erin has fluctuated in size since peaking as a Category 5 storm on Saturday. "Some strengthening is possible during the next day or so, and Erin could become a major hurricane again by tonight," the NHC noted in its 5pm forecast discussion, when the storm was some 295miles south-southeast of Cape Hatteras, N.C. "Weakening is likely to begin by Friday, but Erin is forecast to remain a hurricane into the weekend." Between the lines: Research shows that climate change is increasing hurricane wind speeds, and Hurricane Erin's rapid intensification over unusually warm waters — conditions data show are up to 100 times more likely because of climate change — illustrates this effect.

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