Thursday, January 08, 2009

Hurricane Gustav churns towards Cuba, US

Saturday 30 August 2008

Leaving 85 dead in its path, Hurricane Gustav churned towards Cuba and the United States after ripping through Haiti and the Dominican Republic. In New Orleans, authorities have started evacuating people on the third anniversary of Katrina.

Saturday 30 August 2008

Exactly three years after deadly Hurricane Katrina slammed New Orleans, authorities on Friday began bussing people out of the city ahead of the possible landfall of Gustav, forecast to hit the area early Tuesday as a powerful Category Three hurricane.
   
Residents of the Big Easy were fearing the worst as Gustav regained hurricane strength on its deadly rampage through the Caribbean, where it has killed at least 78 in Haiti, the Dominican Republic and Jamaica.
   
President George W. Bush on Friday declared a state of emergency in Louisiana and Texas, empowering federal authorities to lead disaster relief efforts in the two states, the White House said.
   
Hurricane Katrina made landfall near New Orleans on August 29, 2005 as a Category Three hurricane and smashed poorly-built levees surrounding the city. The subsequent flooding destroyed tens of thousands of homes and killed nearly 1,500 people.
   
Bush's approval ratings at the time plummeted amid widespread criticism that he paid too little attention to Katrina.
   
Louisiana and Mississippi state authorities have already declared emergencies, and several oil companies evacuated workers from their installations in the Gulf of Mexico, where a quarter of US crude oil is produced, as Gustav loomed.
   
The United States could tap its strategic oil reserve if Gustav damages oil installations in the Gulf, a Department of Energy spokeswoman said Friday.
   
State and city officials have vowed to avoid repeating the mistakes of 2005.
   
Officials in Saint Charles parish, in western New Orleans, on Friday began bussing out residents who want to leave the city.
   
While the evacuations were voluntary, authorities in all six New Orleans parishes were planning mandatory evacuations starting noon Saturday if Gustav remains on the same path.
   
Saint Charles officials "are extremely concerned about storm surge flooding" that Gustav would cause, read a statement from the office of Parish President V.J. St. Pierre.
   
"The entire parish remains at risk," St. Pierre wrote. "All residents should be taking steps to secure their homes and prepare for evacuation NOW."
   
Separately, the Red Cross announced it is preparing to assist residents in the storm's path with evacuation shelters, food, and other services.
   
Hurricane Gustav is forecast to make landfall early Tuesday just west of New Orleans, the Miami-based National Hurricane Center said.
   
There is "a very distinct possibility" that it will strike the area as a powerful Category Three hurricane, Hurricane Center spokesman Dennis Feltgen told AFP.
   
Category Three hurricanes pack wind speeds of up to 130 miles (209 kilometers) per hour and nine to 12-foot (2.7-3.7-meter) storm surges.
   
Many New Orleans residents are preparing for the worst.
   
"This is driving me nuts," said Liese Dettmer. "It's like double down or get out."
   
A musician and club booking agent, Dettmer lost everything in Katrina, and was set to mark the third anniversary by moving into her new home in the Musicians Village, a community designed for displaced musicians to help restore the jazz city's culture.
   
But because of delays she and 28 other families must wait until September 5 to move in -- provided Gustav spares New Orleans.
   
Dettmer was one of many New Orleanians who evacuated at the last moment before Katrina hit on August 29, 2005.
   
She rented a car and drove to her parents home in Tennessee at 2:00 am on Sunday August 28, barely 24 hours before Katrina's outer edge reached the city.
   
Dettmer's mid-city apartment of 12 years was flooded. The roof was ripped off by high winds and she lost everything.
   
"I am in a complete state of panic," said Mary Clancy, a professor of biology who lost a subzero freezer full of enzymes when power went out for months after Katrina. "I still can't bring myself to throw out those tubes."
   
Clancy's laboratory building still isn't ready for another major storm. It was slated to get a rooftop generator to protect against loss of research materials due to power failure. It hasn't been installed.
   
"We're supposed to get a temporary generator before the weekend," Clancy said. "It's not here yet," she said, sighing. "This (storm) can't happen."
   
Mayor Ray Nagin said Wednesday that nobody would be allowed to stay in New Orleans should Gustav achieve its forecasted strength and path. "Everyone will be getting out," he said on CNN.
   
Louisiana Lieutenant Governor Mitch Landrieu told Fox Business Network that state and city authorities have been holding emergency meetings "for the last three or four days.
   
"The state police, the national guard, everybody is ready to go," he said.


 

  • 01/09/2008 18:25:30 Alert a moderator

    Flood prevention systems

    your video showing the flood prevention systems gives a taste of what coastal shores and coastlines are going to look like more and more in hurricane areas: totally disfigured!

  • 01/09/2008 17:25:13 Alert a moderator

    gustav

    As usual we give all these names to hurricanes,amazing how the word oil is associated with disasters .is that to justify the price increase to the morons in the western society..

  • 01/09/2008 15:16:03 Alert a moderator

    Solution to Horricane disasters!

    One Factor that determines the stability of Human community is having a an environment free of disasters . The comfortability of humanity has been greatly abused by some human ideas such as drilling and mounting of power plants and lots more. this has contributed to a poor and week lava which eventually leads to this dissasters.

    Pls I want such illegal contribution to human instability to stop. Lets work together to sustain our environmment.

    Great!

  • 01/09/2008 08:51:23 Alert a moderator

    How can they not see it ? ! ?

    I think it's incredible that people continue to say that Global Warming doesn't exist, or that it's always been around. YES, it has, but not to the extent that we've seen over the past ten years. If you haven't seen the movie,
    check out Al Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth" Also read the France24 article that came out today about the Kayak trip to the North Pole: http://tinyurl.com/6ovhks is a short link that you can use to go directly to the article.

  • 31/08/2008 19:55:09 Alert a moderator

    Nawlins

    Is New Orleans going to be the first city to be abandoned as a result of (natural) global waming?

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