Word – Hurricane Beryl Intensifies to a Category 4 Storm

Beryl developed into a record-breaking Category 4 hurricane on Sunday — the earliest in a season that a storm has reached such strength — as forecasters warned it would continue to rapidly intensify while moving west toward the Caribbean Sea.

Before Beryl, the earliest Category 4 hurricane on record was Hurricane Dennis on July 8, 2005.

The first hurricane of the 2024 season, Beryl is expected to bring “life-threatening winds and storm surge” to the Windward Islands, southeast of Puerto Rico and north of Venezuela, the National Hurricane Center said on Sunday.

By Sunday afternoon, sustained winds were reaching 130 miles per hour, forecasters said, making it an “extremely dangerous” Category 4 hurricane.

A hurricane warning was issued for Barbados, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Grenada and the island of Tobago. The island of Martinique was under a tropical storm warning, while Dominica, Trinidad and parts of the Dominican Republic and Haiti were under a tropical storm watch.

Life-threatening winds and storm surge were expected in the Windward Islands starting early on Monday morning, the National Hurricane Center said on Sunday morning.

Hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean are now twice as likely to grow from a weak storm into a major Category 3 or higher hurricane within just 24 hours, according to a study published last year.

Devastating winds from Beryl will occur where the eye wall, the area that surrounds the eye of a hurricane, scrapes across the islands. Across the higher elevations of the hills and mountains of the islands, the winds might be even stronger.

Beryl is the third earliest major hurricane to ever form in the Atlantic, according to Philip Klotzbach, an expert in seasonal hurricane forecasts at Colorado State University. The only hurricanes to have formed earlier in a calendar year were Alma on June 8, 1966, and Audrey on June 27, 1957.

Both made landfall on the U.S. coastline in the Gulf of Mexico: Alma near St. Marks, Fla., and Audrey near Port Arthur, Texas.

Beryl became a tropical storm late on Friday when its sustained winds reached 39 miles per hour. At 74 m.p.h., a storm becomes a hurricane.

  • Swells created by Beryl are expected to reach the Windward and southern Leeward Islands by late Sunday, forecasters said, and are likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions.

  • The storm is expected to cross the islands of the eastern Caribbean as early as Sunday night before traversing the central Caribbean Sea through the middle of the week.

  • Three to six inches of rain, hurricane-force winds and dangerous storm surge are possible in the eastern Caribbean Islands, including Barbados, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines from Sunday into Monday.

Dickson Mitchell, the prime minister of Grenada, said that the country would be under a state of emergency starting at 7 p.m. on Sunday.

Except for the police and essential workers, “everyone is expected to be in their homes or in a shelter,” he said.

In a national address on Sunday, Ralph Gonsalves, the prime minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, urged residents to take the storm seriously, saying that many buildings could lose their roofs.

“There are some persons who are hoping for the best, and we must all do that,” he said. “But we all have to prepare for the worst.”

The prime minister ordered that, beginning at 7 p.m. on Sunday, people remain where they are. Emergency shelters were set to open at 6 p.m. on Sunday.

In St. Lucia, Prime Minister Philip J. Pierre announced a countrywide shutdown at 8:30 p.m. on Sunday, with schools and businesses remaining closed on Monday.

In Barbados, flights to London and Miami were the last international departures from Grantley Adams International Airport before it closed at 7 p.m. on Sunday. Tourism officials said some residents and a handful of tourists had sought refuge at government-specified shelters.

Forecasters have warned that the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season could be much more active than usual.

In late May, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted 17 to 25 named storms this year, an “above-normal” number and a prediction in line with more than a dozen forecasts earlier in the year from experts at universities, private companies and government agencies.

Hurricane seasons produce 14 named storms, on average.

The seasonal hurricane outlooks were notably aggressive because forecasters looking at the start of the season saw a combination of circumstances that didn’t exist in records dating back to the mid-1800s: record warm water temperatures in the Atlantic Ocean and the potential formation of the weather pattern known as La Niña.

When it is strong, La Niña typically provides a calm environment in the Atlantic. This allows storms to develop more easily and to strengthen without interference from wind patterns that might otherwise keep them from organizing.

Johnny Diaz, John Yoon, John Keefe, Kenton X. Chance, Julius Gittens, Sharefil Gaillard, Linda Straker and Yan Zhuang contributed reporting.

Credit by NYT

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