Tropical
Storm Debby heads for Florida coast
Tropical
Storm Debby meandered slowly to the Florida coast on Sunday, bringing
strong winds and waves that forced the closure of about a quarter of
offshore oil and gas production in the Gulf of Mexico and spawning
tornadoes that killed one person.
24
June, 2012
Debby,
the first named storm of 2012 to enter the Gulf of Mexico, was
centered about 115 miles south-southwest of Apalachicola, Florida and
was nearly stationary, the National Hurricane Center said in its 7
p.m. CDT (0000 GMT) update.
Debby,
no longer expected to gain hurricane strength, packed winds of 60
mph, the Miami-based center said.
Citing
a "significant change in the forecast track," the NHC said
Debby is expected to hit the Florida Panhandle near Panama City on
Thursday as a tropical storm. "This forecast remains uncertain
due to weak steering currents," the NHC said.
The
NHC had previously predicted that the storm would track westward
toward the Louisiana coast as a weak hurricane, spurring Louisiana
Governor Bobby Jindal to declare a state of emergency.
Debby
has already disrupted nearly a quarter of Gulf offshore oil and
natural gas production as big offshore operators like BP Plc and
Royal Dutch Shell evacuated workers from offshore platforms in the
path of the storm.
The
disruption could worsen in coming days, with Debby expected to enter
some of the most prolific production areas of the Gulf, home to 20
percent of U.S. oil production and 6 percent of natural gas output.
Debby
brought gale force winds and heavy rain to the Florida Panhandle and
west-central Florida, the NHC said.
Earlier
on Sunday, it spawned tornadoes that killed a woman, severely injured
a child and wrecked homes in central Florida in rural Highlands
County, according to an emergency management official.
In
Alabama, a swimmer who went missing off the coast of Orange Beach is
presumed drowned, according to the U.S. Coast Guard. Several Alabama
beaches were closed due to rough surf.
The
NHC maintained a storm warning for the Mississippi-Alabama border,
extended warnings for Florida's northwest coast to Englewood, and
discontinued warnings for the Louisiana coast. Residents were warned
to expect storm conditions within 36 hours.
"Tropical
storm conditions are already near or over portions of the northeast
Gulf Coast and are expected to reach the remainder of the warning
area tonight," the forecasters warned.
U.S.
officials warned Gulf Coast residents to watch the storm given its
shifting forecast track. "History has taught us that storm
tracks can change quickly and unexpectedly," said Craig Fugate,
administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Debby
could bring total rainfall accumulations of 10-15 inches to the
Florida Panhandle, with isolated accumulations of 25 inches.
At
Gulf Shores, Alabama, on the Gulf Coast, Sharon Edmondson made storm
preparations as she gathered with about 100 family members for
vacation.
"As
long as the family is together, I'll take a hurricane alert at the
beach over most any other normal day," Edmondson said.
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