New Orleans braces for Tropical Storm Barry

Tropical Storm Barry is getting closer to New Orleans as US President Donald Trump declared a state of emergency for the state of Louisiana.

New Orleans storm

Boys play in New Orleans, July 12, 2019, as water moves in from Lake Pontchartrain from the storm surge from Tropical Storm Barry in the Gulf of Mexico. Source: AAP

New Orleans is bracing for severe flooding with residents told to hunker down as a growing tropical storm in the US Gulf of Mexico is headed for landfall as the first Atlantic hurricane of 2019.

US President Donald Trump declared a state of emergency for the state of Louisiana late on Thursday, hours after the region's oil production was cut by half as energy companies evacuated offshore drilling facilities and a coastal refinery.

Tropical Storm Barry was packing maximum sustained winds of 85 km/h early on Friday.

Authorities were keeping a watchful eye on the levee system built to contain flooding along the lower Mississippi River, which winds through the heart of New Orleans and has been running above flood stage for the past six months.

Barry was forecast to bring a coastal storm surge into the mouth of the river that could push its crest to 5.9 metres on Saturday - the highest level since 1950 and dangerously close to the top of the city's levees.

Meteorologists predicted between 25-50 cm of rain along much of the Gulf Coast on Friday and Saturday.
A truck passes floodwater near the New Orleans Superdome.
Tropical Storm Barry is closing in on New Orleans and is already bringing heavy rain and flooding. (AAP) Source: AAP


The brunt of the storm was expected to skirt the western edge of New Orleans instead of making a direct hit.

Officials for the US Army Corps of Engineers, which maintains the levees, insisted no significant breaching of the levees in New Orleans was likely.

Some residents, recalling the deadly, devastating floods unleashed in 2005 by Hurricane Katrina, said they were determined to get out of harm's way.

"It's really the river that has us worried," said Betsey Hazard, who lives with her husband, Jack, and their two young children a block from the Mississippi River.

She said the family was packing up and heading for the neighbouring state of Mississippi to ride out the storm.

"They say that the river won't flood in New Orleans, but we have a five-year-old and a 10-month-old, and we don't want to take any chances."

Others flocked to supermarkets for bottled water, ice, snack foods and beer, thronging grocery outlets in such numbers that some stores ran out of shopping carts.

Throughout the city, motorists left cars parked on the raised median strips of roadways in hopes the extra elevation would protect them from flood damage.

A tropical storm warning was posted on Thursday afternoon for metropolitan New Orleans, and a hurricane warning for a stretch of the Louisiana coast south of the city.

Barry will be classified a hurricane once sustained winds hit 119 km/h, which could occur late on Friday or early on Saturday when its centre is expected to be near the Louisiana shoreline, the National Weather Service said.

Weakening is expected after Barry moves inland.


Share
3 min read

Published

Updated



Share this with family and friends