Satellites are watching Hurricane Lee swirl above the Atlantic Ocean because it makes its approach towards the Canadian coast for a Saturday (Sept. 16) landfall.
The storm, at the moment a Class 1 hurricane packing winds of 80 mph (130 km/h), will possible trigger energy outages, storm surge flooding and flash floods alongside the coast of Maine, New England, Brunswick and Nova Scotia within the subsequent 24 to 48 hours, in line with NOAA and AccuWeather. Thankfully, by the point Lee hits the coast, it’ll have weakened right into a post-tropical storm.
Hurricanes and their remnants do not typically make it as far north as Canada, however scientists assume that the continued development of local weather change will make these harmful climate phenomena extra widespread alongside the northeastern coast of the American continent.
Associated: Hurricane Lee seems completely terrifying on this footage from inside its eye (video)
Final 12 months, Fiona, which peaked as a robust Class 4 Hurricane, reached the Atlantic coast of Canada as a post-tropical storm, inflicting wide-spread destruction. The truth is, the dimensions of the harm made Fiona the most expensive storm in Canada’s historical past, in line with CBC.
Lee is predicted to be considerably milder, in line with the WeatherNetwork. On the time of landfall, the storm will pack sustained winds of at 30 mph (50 km/h) with gusts as much as 50 mph (80 km/h). Fiona, alternatively, struck with sustained winds of 60 mph (100 km/h) and gusts as much as 87 mph (140 km/h).
Along with Lee, tropical storm Margot and tropical melancholy 15 at the moment hover above the Atlantic Ocean, however neither of these is predicted to pose any danger to inhabited areas.
The Atlantic season formally peaked earlier this week. However in August, the U.S. Nationwide Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) elevated its prediction of the depth of this 12 months’s season from near-normal to above-normal ranges.
NOAA up to date the forecast because of the unexpectedly heat floor water temperatures which have been reported throughout the Atlantic Ocean all through this 12 months’s spring and summer season season.