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HURRICANE IGOR A CATEGORY 4 HURRICANE; JULIA NOW A HURRICANE

HURRICANE IGOR A CATEGORY 4 HURRICANE; JULIA NOW A HURRICANE

September 14, 20101298Views

14th September 2010 –At 5:00AM the centre of Hurricane Igor was located near Latitude 17.9 North/Longitude 51.7 West, or about 844 miles east of the Virgin Islands. Movement is to the west-northwest at 8mph. Maximum sustained winds are near 135mph making Igor a category 4 storm on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale. Hurricane force winds extend outwards up to 50 miles and tropical storm force winds extend up to 195 miles. Estimated minimum central pressure is 945MB.


 


Forecasters expect Igor to maintain category 4 status over the next 48-72 hours and expect it to slowly weaken by Friday.


 


Igor has begun to take a turn to the west-northwest this morning. A turn to the northwest is expected by tonight. This track would take the center of Igor about 400 miles to the northeast of the islands of the eastern Caribbean late Wednesday evening.


 


Although Hurricane Igor is expected to track northeast of the Territory the passage of the system is expected to deteriorate marine conditions around late Wednesday through Friday. Swells generated by Igor will begin affecting the Leeward Islands on Tuesday and will reach Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands later tonight and Wednesday. These swells are likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions.


 


HURRICANE JULIA


 


14th September, 2010 – At 5:00AM, Julia was upgraded to a hurricane. It is located near Latitude 16.1 North/Longitude 29.0 West, or about 330 miles west of the Cape Verde Islands. Maximum sustained winds are now near 75 mph. Movement is to the west-northwest at 12 mph.


 


Experts forecast Julia to move generally to the west-northwest to northwest over the next five days. This will keep Julia over the open Atlantic and away from any land areas.


 


Residents are urged not to become relaxed, but to remain in a state of high alert. We are now in the peak of the 2010 Hurricane Season, and any preparedness issues not addressed earlier should be taken care of as soon as possible.  Further advisories and information on developing systems in the Atlantic can be found on the Department of Disaster Management’s website at www.bviddm.com.