Hurricane Ian hits Florida

Four out of five hurricane
Wind speeds of around 240 km/h: Hurricane Ian reaches Florida’s west coast

Sailboats are blown about by fast winds. Hurricane Ian continued to gather strength as it headed toward Florida

© Pedro Portal/El Nuevo Herald via ZUMA Press/DPA

“He’s going to do a lot of damage,” Governor DeSantis warned. Now it’s here: Hurricane Ian has made landfall in Florida. The storm picked up speed as it made its way toward the US coast.

Hurricane Ian made landfall on the west coast of the US state of Florida. The center of the four out of five hurricane hit the coast near the city of Cape Coral, the US hurricane center announced on Wednesday. It is therefore an “extremely dangerous hurricane” that is likely to lead to meter-high storm surges, flooding and heavy rainfall. The authorities warned that serious damage to infrastructure, communication lines and widespread and sustained power outages are to be expected.

Hundreds of thousands without electricity, sometimes meter high flooding

Evacuation instructions applied to 2.5 million people in the region. The first photos and videos on social media already showed severe flooding in the cities of Fort Myers Beach, Cape Coral and Naples, some of which were several meters high. Around 800,000 households in Florida were already without power on Wednesday afternoon (local time), according to the Poweroutage website.

Overland, the storm system should soon lose strength, the hurricane center said. “Ian” could still have destructive hurricane strength on Thursday’s arrival on the east coast of the state, the meteorologists warned.

The hurricane had increased significantly in strength over the Gulf of Mexico on its way towards Florida and, with wind speeds of around 240 kilometers per hour, was just below the threshold for the highest hurricane category.

Governor DeSantis: The next day or two will be ‘very ugly’

Florida’s governor Ron DeSantis had previously prepared the population in his state for severe damage from the approaching hurricane “Ian”. “This is a big, strong storm,” DeSantis said Wednesday morning in the Florida capital, Tallahassee. “He’s going to do a lot of damage,” he warned. The Republican politician predicted that the next day or two would be “very ugly” until the hurricane passed over Florida. “It’s going to be a tough stretch.”

“Ian” made landfall in Cuba on Tuesday as a category three of five hurricane. In the province of Pinar del Río, which was particularly hard hit, two people died after their houses collapsed, the Cuban government said. In the state with a good eleven million inhabitants, the electricity failed nationwide.

yks
DPA

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