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Hurricane Milton: Storm on collision course for Florida’s Gulf Coast is ‘looking like the area’s worst storm in a century’

Floridians on Wednesday had one final day to evacuate or hunker down ahead of the Category 5 Hurricane Milton, potentially one of the most destructive ever to hit the Gulf Coast of Florida.
With more than one million people in coastal areas under evacuation orders, those fleeing for higher ground clogged highways and gas stations ran out of fuel, further rattling a region still recovering from the devastating impacts of Hurricane Helene less than two weeks ago.
The latest update from National Hurricane Center (NHC) says Hurricane Milton is still a Category 5 hurricane but that when it makes landfall it is forecast to fall to a Category 4 storm, with sustained wind speeds of near to 210km/h (130m/h).
Landfall is expected along the west-central coast of Florida late tonight or early Thursday morning, with the storm progressing to move off the east Florida coast on Thursday afternoon. The storm is currently moving northeast at 22km/h, and outer bands have already begun impacting Florida.
The storm is on a collision course for the Tampa Bay metropolitan area, home to more than three million people, though forecasters said the path could vary before the storm makes landfall late Wednesday night or early Thursday morning.
The storm is on a rare west-to-east path through the Gulf of Mexico and is likely to bring a deadly storm surge of 3m (10ft) or more to much of Florida’s Gulf Coast.
President Joe Biden approved an emergency declaration for Florida, and the White House announced on Tuesday that he would postpone a trip to Germany and Angola to monitor the storm.
“This could be the worst storm to hit Florida in over a century,” Mr Biden told reporters. “God willing it won’t be. But that’s what it’s looking like right now.”
[ After the storm: Will Hurricane Milton impact Ireland?Opens in new window ]
Milton packed maximum sustained winds of 260km/h (160m/h), the NHC said, putting it at the highest level on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale.
While wind speeds could drop and downgrade Milton to a lesser category, the size of the storm was growing, putting ever more coastal areas in danger.
Milton was expected to maintain hurricane strength as it crosses the Florida peninsula, posing storm surge danger on the state’s Atlantic Coast as well.
Milton became the third-fastest intensifying storm on record in the Atlantic, growing from a Category 1 to a Category 5 in less than 24 hours.
“These extremely warm sea surface temperatures provide the fuel necessary for the rapid intensification that we saw taking place to occur,” said climate scientist Daniel Gilford of Climate Central, a non-profit research group. “We know that as human beings increase the amount of greenhouse gasses in the atmosphere, largely by burning fossil fuels, we are increasing that temperature all around the planet.”
More than a dozen coastal counties issued mandatory evacuation orders. Mobile home sites, nursing homes and assisted-living facilities also faced mandatory evacuation.
Michael Tylenda, who was visiting his son in Tampa, said he was heeding that advice. “If anybody knows anything about Florida, when you don’t evacuate when you’re ordered to, you can pretty much die,” he said.
“They’ve had a lot of people here stay at their homes and they end up drowning. It’s just not worth it. You know, the house can be replaced. The stuff can be replaced. So it’s just better to get out of town.”
In Fort Myers, mobile home-resident Jamie Watts and his wife took refuge in a hotel after losing their previous trailer to Hurricane Ian in 2022.
“My wife’s happy. We’re not in that tin can,” Mr Watts said. “We stayed during Ian and literally watched my roof tear off my house and it put a turmoil in us. So this time I’m going to be a little safer,” he said.
Bumper-to-bumper traffic choked roads leading out of Tampa on Tuesday, when about 17 per cent of Florida’s nearly 8,000 gas stations had run out of fuel, according to fuel markets tracker GasBuddy. – Agencies

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