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Wilma may become hurricane, heads for Gulf of Mexico

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Wilma may become hurricane, heads for Gulf of Mexico

Four of seven major weather models predict Tropical Storm Wilma, which could become a hurricane by Tuesday, will head for the Gulf Coast of Florida.

Earlier Monday morning, most of the models forecast the storm would crash into the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico or Belize later this week.

By late morning, most of the forecasts showed the storm would turn north toward western Cuba and Florida’s Gulf Coast.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center still forecast the storm would graze the northeastern tip of the Yucatan and enter the Gulf of Mexico where it could threaten the already hurricane-battered U.S. oil and natural gas rigs and refineries along the Gulf Coast.

Satellite data indicate maximum sustained winds near 45 miles per hour with higher gusts, the NHC said in an advisory, making Wilma the 21st named tropical storm of the active and devastating 2005 Atlantic season, tying the 1933 record for named storms.

The NHC forecast Wilma could become a hurricane by Tuesday.

More: today.reuters.co.uk

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