Thousands flee as ‘extremely dangerous’ Hurricane Ida heads for US Gulf Coast

Storm expected to bring 225km/h winds, heavy downpours and flooding in Louisiana

A musician plays a trombone as workers board up shop windows with plywood ahead of Hurricane Ida in the French Quarter neighborhood of New Orleans on Saturday.  Photograph: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg
A musician plays a trombone as workers board up shop windows with plywood ahead of Hurricane Ida in the French Quarter neighborhood of New Orleans on Saturday. Photograph: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg

Hurricane Ida on Saturday intensified over warm Gulf of Mexico waters, prompting tens of thousands to flee coastal areas, while US president Joe Biden pledged aid to help states quickly recover once the storm has passed.

Forecasters said Ida could make a US landfall on Sunday as an “extremely dangerous” Category 4 storm on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale, generating winds of 225km/h, heavy downpours and a tidal surge that could plunge much of the Louisiana shoreline under several feet of water.

On Saturday afternoon Ida was about 470km southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River, packing top winds of 155km/h and aiming for the Louisiana coast, the National Hurricane Centre said.

“We’re concerned about explosive development shortly before it makes landfall,” said Jim Foerster, chief meteorologist at DTN, which provides weather advice to oil and transportation companies.

READ MORE
Vehicles pack a highways  almost to a standstill as people leave New Orleans in advance of the arrival of Hurricane Ida. Photograph: Dan Anderson/EPA
Vehicles pack a highways almost to a standstill as people leave New Orleans in advance of the arrival of Hurricane Ida. Photograph: Dan Anderson/EPA

Flooding from Ida’s storm surge – high water driven by the hurricane’s winds – could reach between 3 and 4.5m around the mouth of the Mississippi River, with lower levels extending east along the adjacent coastlines of Mississippi and Alabama, the NHC said.

Officials ordered widespread evacuations of low-lying and coastal areas, jamming highways and leading some gasoline stations to run dry as residents and vacationers fled the seashore.

“I left Fourchon last night at 8 o’clock and it’s a ghost town,” said Andre LeBlanc, a sportfishing captain speaking from his inland home in Lafayette, Louisiana.

“We were some of the last to get out of there.”

Power outages

Utilities were bringing in extra crews and equipment to deal with expected power losses. Hundreds of thousands of homes could fall dark as Ida’s strong winds carry well into Louisiana and as far east at Mobile, Alabama, said DTN’s Foerster.

Mr Biden on Saturday said 500 federal emergency response workers were in Texas and Louisiana to respond to the storm. Aid workers have “closely coordinated with the electric utilities to restore power as soon as possible,” Mr Biden said at a briefing with Federal Emergency Management Agency officials.

Louisiana governor John Bel Edwards, whose state is already reeling from a public health crisis stemming from a fourth wave of the Covid-19 pandemic, said Ida’s winds will be fierce and spread across a 482km area.

“We have a very serious situation on our hands,” Mr Edwards said at a briefing. “This will be one of the strongest hurricanes to hit anywhere in the state of Louisiana since at least the 1850s.”

The state is not planning to evacuate hospitals now strained by an influx of Covid-19 patients, he said. There were more than 3,400 new infections reported on Friday, and about 2,700 people are hospitalized with the virus.

“We have been talking to hospitals to make sure that their generators are working, that they have way more water on hand than normal, that they have PPE on hand,” Edwards said.

Fuel output cuts

US energy companies reduced offshore oil production by 91 per cent and gasoline refiners cut operations at Louisiana plants in the path of the storm. Regional fuel prices rose in anticipation of production losses.

Phillips 66 completed a shut-down of its Alliance refinery on Louisiana’s coast, and PBF Energy Inc reduced its Chalmette, Louisiana, processing, people familiar with the matter said.

Gasoline demand in Louisiana was up 71 per cent for the week ended Friday, said Patrick DeHaan, head of petroleum analysis at tracking firm GasBuddy.

Ida, the ninth named storm and fourth hurricane of the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season, may well exceed the strength of Hurricane Laura, the last Category 4 storm to strike Louisiana, by the time it makes landfall, forecasters said.

The region was devastated in August 2005 by Hurricane Katrina, which killed more than 1,800 people. – Reuters