Mexico Travel Mexico News Mexico Destination Guide Contact Us

Mexico Travel Guide and Destinations



Katrina Strengthens on a Path Through Gulf of Mexico (Update2)

Filed under:

Katrina Strengthens on a Path Through Gulf of Mexico (Update2)

Katrina strengthened as it headed into the Gulf of Mexico after it swept across southern Florida, killing four people and leaving more than one million homes without power.

The hurricane’s center was about 60 miles (97 kilometers) west-northwest of Key West, Florida, the National Hurricane Center in Miami said in its 2 p.m. advisory. Katrina was moving west- southwest at about 8 mph (13 kph), the center said.

Katrina blasted the state with rain and wind, knocking down trees, tossing debris and wiping out power to more than a million homes as it came ashore yesterday between Hallandale and Miami Beaches. The storm is gathering speed and strength as it moves over the Gulf of Mexico and heads toward the state’s Panhandle, the center said.

“It’s just really exhausting,'’ said Catherine Zehner, the public information officer for Bay County, Florida, which includes Panama City. “A lot of people after (Hurricane) Dennis didn’t even take the plywood off their houses because they knew we were going to get hit again.'’

More: bloomberg.com

Related Mexico Travel Information

Hurricane Katrina enters the Gulf of Mexico

Hurricane Katrina enters the Gulf of Mexico HURRICANE Katrina passed through southern Florida overnight Thursday and entered the Gulf of Mexico early Friday morning at a point north of and near Cape Sable, in the southwestern Florida peninsula, according to Official Note No. 12 from the Cuban Meteorological Institute’s Forecast Center. Katrina, after weakening somewhat upon touching land, once again reached the category of hurricane; the storm now has sustained maximum winds of 120 kilometers per hour, with stronger gusts, and its central pressure has gone down to 987 hectoPascal, which is why is remains a Category 1 hurricane on the

Gulf of Mexico acts as gale

Gulf of Mexico acts as gale Millions of people cowered in fear yesterday as Hurricane Katrina slammed into New Orleans and the Gulf Coast of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama with 225-kilometre-an-hour winds fuelled by the warm waters of the the Gulf of Mexico. After stumbling across southern Florida as a weak category one storm late last week, Katrina wobbled into the Gulf and surged in strength over the next four days, becoming several times stronger before coming ashore yesterday as a category four hurricane with a storm track almost 640 km wide. In terms of Gulf hurricanes, Katrina was almost the perfect storm. "When

Katrina Gaining Strength in Gulf of Mexico

Katrina Gaining Strength in Gulf of Mexico Residents of the Florida Panhandle and other parts of the Gulf Coast nervously monitored the path of Hurricane Katrina on Saturday as weary South Florida homeowners cleaned mud out of basements flooded by the storm and street crews canoed through miles of inundated roadways. Katrina threatened an encore visit as early as Monday after ripping across southern Florida and killing seven people. But forecasters were uncertain of exactly where it might strike, saying the storm could make landfall anywhere from the Panhandle to Louisiana. "The people of Pensacola don't need another one. They just don't need

GlobalSantaFe Updates Status of Gulf of Mexico Fleet

GlobalSantaFe Updates Status of Gulf of Mexico Fleet (NYSE: GSF) today reported that it has accounted for all five of its drilling rigs that were in the direct path of Hurricane Katrina. All personnel on the five rigs were safely evacuated prior to the storm's arrival. GlobalSantaFe rigs in the path of Hurricane Katrina included the GSF Development Driller II and GSF High Island VIII, which showed no signs of damage during a preliminary aerial inspection. The GSF Celtic Sea and GSF Development Driller I were listing slightly, and crews and equipment are arriving on location

Rita strengthens to Category 3 over Gulf of Mexico

Rita strengthens to Category 3 over Gulf of Mexico KEY WEST, Fla. Hurricane Rita's top sustained winds are up to 120 miles per hour, and forecasters say the storm is expected to reach Category Four strength sometime today. Category Four hurricanes pack sustained winds of at least 131 miles per hour.Rita, the fifth major hurricane of the season, largely spared the Florida Keys. But it's aimed for the Gulf Coast, where people are worried.Rita's raging eye did not hit land in the Florida Keys.Thousands of relieved residents who evacuated are expected to begin returning today. Copyright 2005 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Shell, BP evacuate Gulf of Mexico workers due to Hurricane Katrina

Shell, BP evacuate Gulf of Mexico workers due to Hurricane Katrina Royal Dutch Shell PLC and BP PLC have evacuated workers from their platforms in the Gulf of Mexico as Hurricane Katrina heads towards the area. Shell, in a statement, said it will evacuate around 120 non-essential staff from the eastern part of its Gulf operations as a 'precaution'. A BP spokesman said it will also evacuate a still undetermined number of workers. Both companies said the move will not affect their Gulf production. Katrina came ashore in Florida on Thursday, killing at least three people and leaving about 1.5 mln

Katrina Could be in Gulf of Mexico by Saturday

Katrina Could be in Gulf of Mexico by Saturday Most of southeast Florida is under a hurricane watch as Tropical Storm Katrina moves closer to the state. Forecasters at the National Hurricane Center in Miami have posted tropical storm warnings and a hurricane watch from Florida City just south of Miami north to Vero Beach. Katrina has maximum sustained winds of 40-miles per hour, but the storm is expected to grow stronger and become a minimal hurricane before it comes ashore Friday morning. Katrina is expected to emerge over the Gulf of Mexico by Saturday morning and could re-strengthen before making

Oil Production Down 78 Percent in Gulf of Mexico

Oil Production Down 78 Percent in Gulf of Mexico The U.S. government says oil production in the Gulf of Mexico was nearly 80 percent below normal as of Saturday, five days after Hurricane Katrina tore through the region. A report from the U.S. Minerals Management Service said Katrina had cut oil production in the Gulf by about 1.18 million barrels of oil per day. It said more than 280 offshore oil-drilling rigs and platforms remained evacuated. The figures represent a slight improvement from Friday, when oil production in the Gulf was nearly 90 percent below normal. Katrina's disruption to Gulf-area oil production and refineries

Ernesto prompts evacuations in Gulf of Mexico

Ernesto prompts evacuations in Gulf of Mexico Hurricane Ernesto threatened Haiti with deadly floods and prompted evacuations in Florida and Cuba on Sunday as it headed for the Gulf of Mexico a year after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans. Residents of the battered United States Gulf coast jazz city were breathing more easily as the Atlantic seasons first hurricane took a path that left Louisiana outside the danger zone but raised alarms in Florida, weary from eight hurricanes in the last two years. Cuba, facing its first hurricane in decades without President Fidel Castro at the helm, began evacuating 200 000 people from

Category 3 Hurricane Katrina Eyes Gulf Of Mexico Coast

Category 3 Hurricane Katrina Eyes Gulf Of Mexico Coast New Orleans, Louisiana--Hurricane Katrina, is a Category 3 hurricane as predicted by Bayoubuzz meteorologist, Ed Roy. The storm is moving westward through the Southeastern Gulf of Mexico at a clip of 7 to 11 miles per hour, the Gulf Coast guessing game begins. The Katriana Eye at 8 a.m. EST was near latitude 24.4 North and Longitude 11 KM/Hr. The slow moving storm has maximum sustained winds near 116 MPH and with higher gusts. A gradual turn toward the west-northwest is expected during the next 24 hours. Hurricane forces

Travel to World

© Mexico Travelers About Us :: Advertise with Us :: Copyright and Privacy Policy :: Contact Us Powered by: Travel to World
  Site Design and Developer : MAAS InfoMedia