Hurricane Erick in Mexico damages businesses and boats
This is the first major hurricane of the season, with another eight to 11 windstorms expected to hit the country.
It is expected to move inland over Southern Mexico, with winds reaching 250km per hour, damaging around 30 boats.

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UPI
5 days ago
- UPI
Defense Department opts to not end satellite data for storm forecasts
An infrared satellite image of the Atlantic Ocean shows Hurricane Dorian on Sept. 6, 2019, as a Category 2 hurricane. U.S. Navy photo via Naval Research Laboratory July 30 (UPI) -- The U.S. Defense Department won't end the dispersal of key satellite weather data on Friday as planned. One month ago, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration published a notice about the change by the U.S. Navy, effective July 1. Then NOAA said the change would be delayed by one month until Thursday. In an update posted Wednesday, the phase-out plans were pushed back one year. "The Fleet Numerical Meteorology and Oceanography Center (FNMOC) has announced plans to continue distribution of Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) data beyond July 31, 2025," the update said. "As a result, there will be no interruption to DMSP data delivery." With the peak hurricane season underway, forecasters with the National Weather Service, National Hurricane Center, media outlets, private meteorologists and weather watchers had expressed concern about not getting the satellite imagery. "Crisis averted," Michael Lowry, a meteorologist at the Storm Surge Unit of the National Hurricane Center, posted on Blue Sky, noting it "means our hurricane forecast tools should stay intact." A U.S. Space Force spokesperson said in a statement that the satellites and instruments are functional and that the Department of Defense will continue to use them. A U.N. Navy official told ABC News that plans were to "phase out the data as part of the Defense Department modernization effort," but pushed it back after feedback and a "way to meet modernization goals while keeping the data flowing until the sensor fails or the program formally ends in September 2026." For 40 years, the Pentagon has operated satellites for atmospheric and ocean conditions. Special Sensor Microwave Imager Sounder Sensors onboard three DMSP satellites will be turned off. The satellites gather multiple wavelengths of light, including visible, infrared and microwave, Kim Wood, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Arizona, told Scientific American. Microwaves are used to monitor hurricanes, Wood said, "because the waves are so long they get through the tops of the clouds" and help scientists to understand a storm's inner workings, especially those that occur at night. With the real-time data, hurricane experts can see where the center of a storm forms, and hence figure out the direction where it could be headed, including land. They can see when a new eyewall forms, which helps determine intensity. That was done with Hurricane Erick earlier this month in the Pacific Ocean. The Navy uses data to track conditions for its ships. "It's not an issue of funding cuts," Mark Serreze, the director of the National Snow and Ice Data Center, a federally funded research center in Colorado, told NPR. "There are cybersecurity concerns. That's what we're being told." Nevertheless, the Trump administration has been making cuts to the federal agencies with dealing with weather. The National Hurricane Center, which is overseen by NOAA, didn't expect less-accurate forecasts. "NOAA's data sources are fully capable of providing a complete suite of cutting-edge data and models that ensure the gold-standard weather forecasting the American people deserve," NOAA communications director Kim Doster told NPR. NOAA and NASA also operate satellites that are used for forecasts. The hurricane season runs from June 1 to Nov. 30 with six so far named in the Pacific and three so far in the Atlantic.


CBS News
7 days ago
- CBS News
Hurricane Iona strengthens to Category 3 storm off southern Hawaii
Hurricane Iona strengthened to a Category 3 storm in the central Pacific Ocean on Tuesday, several hundred miles off the southern coast of Hawaii, forecasters said. Iona was located about 790 miles south-southeast of Hawaii's capital city of Honolulu on Tuesday morning, with maximum sustained winds near 115 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center based in Miami. Forecasters said the storm didn't pose an immediate threat to the Hawaiian Islands and no coastal watches or warnings are in effect. Iona was expected to move westward for the next couple of days, forecasters with the hurricane center said. "Additional strengthening is forecast tonight, with steady weakening expected to begin by Wednesday," the center said. Iona initially formed as a tropical depression late Saturday night, forecasters said. As the depression gained strength, it became the first named storm in the central Pacific Ocean this season. It is one of two major weather systems in the central Pacific Ocean. Tropical Storm Keli is farther south with maximum sustained winds of 40 mph. It was about 960 miles southeast of Honolulu and was moving west at about 12 mph. The eastern Pacific has seen several named storms so far this season. Last month, Erick made landfall in Mexico as a Category 3 hurricane. Earlier this month, Flossie also reached Category 3 strength as it skirted up the Mexican coast, but ultimately didn't make landfall. Barbara, this season's first hurricane in the eastern Pacific, reached Category 1 strength off Mexico's coast and also didn't make landfall. The Atlantic Ocean has seen three named tropical storms so far this year. Forecasters at Colorado State University expect the Atlantic season to be above average with 16 named storms, eight of which are expected to be hurricanes.
Yahoo
30-06-2025
- Yahoo
Tropical Storms Flossie, Barry gain strength; East, Midwest brace for hail, flooding
Two tropical depressions gained strength off the coasts of Mexico and became tropical storms Sunday − and one could become a "significant hurricane" by Wednesday, the National Hurricane Center warned. Neither storm −now named Barry and Flossie − was forecast to have much impact on the U.S., but parts of Mexico could face mudslides, 10 inches of rain and heavy winds, forecasters said. Unrelated to the tropical storms, much of the U.S. Midwest and East faced rounds of severe thunderstorms packing strong winds and hail and raising flooding concerns Sunday and Monday. AccuWeather meteorologists said hot and humid air will clash with an advancing cool air boundary into early week causing thunderstorms to erupt, some of them severe. As those storms push east on Monday, AccuWeather meteorologist Peyton Simmers warned that evening commutes Monday could be slowed in major cities such as New York City, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. Tropical Storm Barry, which formed in the Atlantic Basin, and Tropical Storm Flossie, in the Pacific Basin, were each driving winds of about 40 mph Sunday, just enought to gain tropical storm status. "There are areas that could get 10 inches of rain" from Barry, AccuWeather lead hurricane expert Alex DaSilva told USA TODAY. "The main issues will be heavy rainfall and mudslides. Some areas such as Acapulco are still recovering from Hurrcane Erick." Hurricane Erick, which was actually a Pacific Basin storm, made landfall on Mexico's southern Pacific coast as a Category 3 storm on June 19. The storm brought destructive winds, heavy rains and widespread flooding to the states of Oaxaca and Guerrero. Homes, roads and infrastructure were destroyed or damaged, leaving thousands of people without shelter, food, water and electricity. Barry was expected to rapidly weaken Sunday as it moves inland. How do hurricanes form? An inside look at the birth and power of ferocious storms In the Pacific Basin storm, Tropical Depression 6-E strengthened to Tropical Storm Flossie on Sunday. Flossie is moving toward the west-northwest a about 9 mph. "Flossie is hanging off the western side of Mexico in a very favorable environment for intensification," DaSilva said. "Unlike the storm on the eastern side, Flossie could rapidly intensify and we do expect it to become a hurricane on Tuesday." DaSilva said Flossie could top out as a Category 2 storm later Tuesday or Wednesday but is expected to remain offshore. Still, it is expected to get close enough to land to bring damaging winds to Mexico's coast. Three to 6 inches of rain, with isolated areas of10 inches, were forecast across portions of the Mexican states of Oaxaca, Guerrero, Michoacán, Colima and Jalisco over the next few days, the hurricane center said. "Life-threatening" flooding and mudslides, especially in areas of steep terrain, were forecast. Tropical Depression 2: Forms off southeastern Mexico, forecast to become tropical storm The National Hurricane Center names storms in both basins but pulls from separate lists. The Pacific hurricane season actually starts May 15, while the Atlantic season began June 1. Both basins are seeing more named storms than would be expected this early in their seasons, DaSilva said. Barry, as the second named storm for the Atlantic, is more than two weeks early. On average, a second storm is named on July 16. "Flossie will be sixth named storm in the Pacific, where the average 6th named storm is Aug. 3. So we are two months ahead," DaSilva said. "This has been a very hot start to the season." Later in the week, forecasters are watching for disturbances off the Southeast coast of the U.S. starting around the Fourth of July. "The next thing to watch is what might happen July 4-7," DaSilva said. He said a cold front is expected to stall in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico. Storms often form from stalled cold fronts, he said. DaSilva does not expect a hurricane, although the weather front could bring heavy rains to North Florida. But the threat remains several days out and it is possible it could result in only rip currents, he said. Hurricanes are born in the tropics, above warm water. Clusters of thunderstorms can develop over the ocean when water temperatures exceed 80 degrees Fahrenheit. If conditions are right, the clusters swirl into a storm known as a tropical wave or tropical depression. A tropical depression becomes a named tropical storm once its sustained wind speeds reaches 39 miles per hour. When its winds reach 74 mph, the storm officially becomes a hurricane. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tropical Storms Barry, Flossie form. Will the US get hit?