Tropical storm Elsa makes landfall in Cuba, on track to Florida

FAN Editor
A couple prepare a window of their home for the arrival of Storm Elsa, Guanabo, Cuba
A couple prepare a window of their home for the arrival of Storm Elsa, Guanabo, Cuba, July 5, 2021. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini

July 6, 2021

By Sarah Marsh and Marc Frank

HAVANA (Reuters) -Tropical storm Elsa made landfall near Cuba’s Bay of Pigs on its south-central coast on Monday and started plowing through the island nation, on track to Florida after causing at least three deaths elsewhere in the Caribbean.

Cuba’s Meteorology Institute said Elsa, which had previously wreaked havoc in parts of Barbados, St. Lucia, Haiti, Jamaica and the Dominican Republic, was moving northwest at 22 km (14 miles) per hour, and that sustained winds were peaking near 95 mph (59 mph)

Storm surges were affecting Cuba’s southern coast, while parts of the country experienced strong rain and winds, the institute said. Meteorologists said the rains from Elsa could prove positive for agriculture as long as they were not too intense.

Elsa comes as the Caribbean’s island nations are already struggling with the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic on their tourism-reliant economies and bracing for another especially active hurricane season https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/us-government-forecasters-predict-above-normal-2021-atlantic-hurricane-season-2021-05-20.

Authorities and locals in some countries had already started work by Monday on repairing damage caused by Elsa such as removing toppled trees and other debris and restoring power.

“We continue with maximum attention focused on the track of storm Elsa through Cuba,” President Miguel Diaz-Canel tweeted early in the morning. “Authorities are working all over the country.”

The storm was expected to exit the country overnight just east of Havana between Mayabeque and the city of Matanzas, Cuba’s meteorology institute said.

More than 100,000 people in Cuba have been evacuated from flood-prone areas or unsafe housing in the potential path of the storm, most going to homes of family and friends, but thousands also to government shelters, state-run media reported.

While such preparedness has typically enabled Cuba to avoid the kind of casualties from storms seen elsewhere, it comes amid Cuba’s worst coronavirus outbreak since the start of the pandemic, raising fears that evacuations could fuel infections.

Farmers sped up harvesting of fruit and vegetables to save them from the storm while local authorities removed debris from streets to prevent them flying around in the wind, and some inhabitants along the coast moved their furniture to higher ground.

Rainfall of 5 to 10 inches (13 to 25 cm) with isolated maximum amounts of 15 inches (38 cm) was forecast across parts of Cuba on Monday and expected to result in “significant flash flooding and mudslides,” the Miami-based U.S. National Hurricane Center (NHC) said.

“The rain has worsened a lot and the winds feel strong,” said Kenia Otano, a radio reporter who lives on the coast where Elsa made landfall.

A tropical storm watch and storm surge watch were in place for much of the western coast of Florida, the NHC said, with Elsa expected to pass near the Florida Keys early Tuesday and move near or over portions of the west coast of Florida on Tuesday and Wednesday.

The NHC said amounts of 2 to 4 inches (5 to 10 cm) of rain with localized maximum amounts up to 6 inches (15 cm) were expected across Florida and coastal Georgia through Wednesday, which might trigger isolated flash, urban and minor river flooding.

A few tornadoes were possible across south Florida on Monday night and across the Florida peninsula on Tuesday, the agency added.

“All Floridians should prepare for the possibility of heavy rain, flooding and potential power outages,” Florida Governor Ron DeSantis wrote on Twitter. “Now is the time to restock your supplies and review your hurricane plan.”

The approach of the storm forced Florida officials to demolish the remaining portion of a condo building that collapsed 11 days ago, killing at least 24 people with over 120 still missing.

Meteorologists are forecasting an above-normal 2021 Atlantic hurricane season, after a 2020 season that was the most active on record, producing 30 named tropical storms.

(Reporting by Sarah Marsh and Marc Frank in Havana with additional reporting by Kate Chappell in Kingston, Jamaica and Sarah Peter in St Lucia Editing by Kevin Liffey, Mark Heinrich and Jonathan Oatis)

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