Ernesto is strengthening as it plows through Caribbean islands. Here’s where it could go next and how strong it could get. | CNN (2024)

CNN

Tropical Storm Ernesto is steadily growing stronger as it slams the northern Caribbean with heavy rain, gusty winds and rough seas Tuesday, lashing the Virgin Islands and heading toward Puerto Rico.

Hurricane watches were in effect for the US and British Virgin Islands, Vieques and Culebra, as forecasters grew more concerned Ernesto could rapidly intensify into a dangerous hurricane thanks to very warm ocean water.

“Ernesto is expected to become a hurricane later tonight or early Wednesday to the north of the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico,” the National Hurricane Center said Tuesday evening.

Previously, it was forecast to reach hurricane-strength later during the day on Wednesday.

The storm’s maximum sustained winds increased by 25 mph to 65 mph over a 12-hour period from Tuesday morning to Tuesday evening. In order to meet the definition of rapid intensification, storms have to gain at least 35 mph of strength over a 24-hour period.

Ernesto’s center was moving over the Virgin Islands on Tuesday evening after tracking near or over Guadeloupe early Tuesday. It’s been on a collision course with the region since forming early Monday evening.

US National Weather Service meteorologists issued a flash flood warning for St. Croix in the US Virgin Islands until 4 a.m.

“Doppler radar indicated southern rainbands from Tropical Storm Ernesto producing heavy rain across the warned area,” the weather service said late Tuesday. “Between 1 and 2 inches of rain have fallen. Additional rainfall amounts of 2 to 3 inches are possible in the warned area.Flash flooding is ongoing or expected to begin shortly.”

Tropical Storm Ernesto moves through the northern Caribbean Tuesday afternoon.

Tropical storm-force winds extended up to 115 miles from Ernesto’s center and are delivering gusty winds to much of the region. A 65 mph gust at Saint Barthélemy – known commonly as St. Bart’s – occurred when Ernesto was about 100 miles away.

Ernesto’s wind and rain will spread over more of the region overnight Tuesday and Wednesday.

Tropical storm warnings are in effect for Puerto Rico and the Leeward Islands, including the US and British Virgin Islands. Ernesto’s strong wind gusts are capable of damaging some structures and taking down trees and power lines.

Drenching, potentially flooding rainfall looks to be the most significant threat over parts of the Caribbean this week. Heavy rain will persist for much of the Leeward Islands through Tuesday night but wet weather will linger into Wednesday.

A deluge of rain will begin for the US and British Virgin Islands Tuesday evening and reach Puerto Rico Tuesday night. The heaviest rain should cease over these areas late Wednesday.

Rainfall totals of 4 to 6 inches will be widespread, with up to 10 inches possible in parts of Puerto Rico. Flash flooding and mudslides are possible as a result, especially in the higher terrain areas of eastern and southern Puerto Rico.

Ernesto is strengthening as it plows through Caribbean islands. Here’s where it could go next and how strong it could get. | CNN (1)

Tropical storm-force windswill also pound areas within Ernesto’s path through at least Wednesday night. These winds will continue to create dangerous seas andup to 3 feet of storm surge for many islands in the region.

The combination of rain and wind could cause issues for Puerto Rico’svulnerable electrical infrastructure.

Puerto Rico officials activated the National Guard, canceled classes in public schools and warned Ernesto would cause widespread power outages given the fragile state of Puerto Rico’s power grid, the Associated Press reported. Crews are still rebuilding the grid after Hurricane Maria struck the island in September 2017 as a Category 4 storm.

“That’s a reality,” Juan Saca, president of Luma Energy, a private company that operates the transmission and distribution of power in Puerto Rico, told the AP.

Preparations need to be finalized before the storm arrives, Jaclyn Rothenberg, FEMA’s Public Affairs Director, urged Tuesday.

“The people of Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands are no strangers to storms,” Rothenburg told CNN. “They know how to prepare, but I know that there also are a lot of travelers – people that are visiting the islands during the summer for fun.”

Ernesto is strengthening as it plows through Caribbean islands. Here’s where it could go next and how strong it could get. | CNN (2)

Cars drive down a flooded road following heavy rains in the town of Basse-Terre, on the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, on August 13, 2024.

With power outages a possibility, it’s important to have non-perishable food on hand, charge up any electronic devices and make a plan to keep medications that need refrigeration cool.

“It’s really important that people aren’t complacent, that they are taking the storm seriously and that they’re preparing for the impact,” Rothenberg said.

A gradual turn to the north is expected to begin Wednesday and pull Ernesto away from the Caribbean into the open Atlantic. Once over open water, Ernesto will strengthen even further.

How strong Ernesto gets will depend heavily onvery warmocean water and how potent storm-disrupting upper level winds become over the region. It’s possible Ernesto will become a major hurricane – Category 3 strength or greater – late this week.

But Ernesto’s track could shift depending on a number of factors, including when it is pulled northward. A later turn would mean the storm would impact areas farther west like Hispaniola or the southern Bahamas.

Ernesto could be a powerful hurricane by the weekend asit approaches Bermuda. It’s too early to know exactly how close Ernesto will come to Bermuda and how much rain and wind it’ll bring.

The island is expecting to see heavy rain from another weather system in the next few days. “Residents need to prepare now before conditions worsen. Time is of the essence,” Minister of National Security Michael Weeks said Tuesday.

Ernesto will have wide-reaching impacts later this week and this weekend despite a track somewhere over the open Atlantic.

The storm will churn up seas hundreds of miles away and could create dangerous rip currents for the US East Coast, the Bahamas and parts of the Caribbean into early next week.

With Ernesto bearing down on US territories, the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s disaster fund is in a deficit. It’s the second year in a row the fund has been depleted before the peak of hurricane season.

“This is, without a doubt, because of the increase in extremeweatherevents caused byclimatechange,” Rothenberg, the agency’s spokesperson, told CNN.

FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell shifted the agency into what’s known as immediate needs funding on August 7, Rothenberg told CNN. The agency is waiting for Congress to pass a $9 billion supplemental funding request to replenish the fund, but the House and Senate are in recess until September. It’s unclear when lawmakers will address the fund after they return.

Ernesto is strengthening as it plows through Caribbean islands. Here’s where it could go next and how strong it could get. | CNN (3)

Heavy rainfall following tropical storm Ernesto had Meteo-France place the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe on orange alert.

Rothenberg stressed FEMA has enough resources to respond to impending disasters like Ernesto.

FEMA will continue to fund “search and rescue operations, being able to bring in equipment, generators, things like that,” Rothenberg told CNN, adding, “I don’t want the people of Puerto Rico and USVI to be worried about this at all.”

But on pause will be responses like long-term recovery from previous disasters, of which there’s no shortage. Through July, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported the US experienced 19 separateweatherandclimatedisasters, with damage exceeding $1 billion – the second-highest amount for the first seven months of the year. It falls just behind a record set in 2023.

The NOAA tally doesn’t include devastating flooding fromHurricaneDebby, which made landfall earlier this month.

CNN Meteorologists Taylor Ward and Robert Shackelford contributed to this report.

Ernesto is strengthening as it plows through Caribbean islands. Here’s where it could go next and how strong it could get. | CNN (2024)

FAQs

How fast is Ernesto moving? ›

Tuesday, the center of Post-Tropical Cyclone Ernesto was moving toward the northeast near 37 mph, and an even faster east-northeastward motion was expected during the next day or two. Maximum sustained winds were near 70 mph with higher gusts.

How do hurricanes lose strength once they reach the land? ›

Eventually, hurricanes turn away from the tropics and into mid-latitudes. Once they move over cold water or over land and lose touch with the hot water that powers them, these storms weaken and break apart.

Where will Ernesto hit? ›

Ernesto made landfall in the tiny North Atlantic Island of Bermuda early Saturday morning as a Category 1 hurricane, knocking out power to thousands and dropping several inches of rain as residents hunkered down.

Where did Hurricane Ernesto make landfall? ›

In western Bermuda, Ernesto made landfall during the early morning of Saturday, Aug. 17, 2024, as a Category 1 hurricane with 85 mph sustained wind and gusts near 100 mph, then downgraded to a tropical storm, but winds had picked up again and the system became a hurricane.

What strengthens a hurricane? ›

If wind conditions are right, the storm becomes a hurricane. This heat energy is the fuel for the storm. And the warmer the water, the more moisture is in the air. And that could mean bigger and stronger hurricanes.

How fast can a hurricane travel? ›

Typically, a hurricane's forward speed averages around 15-20 mph. However, some hurricanes stall, often causing devastatingly heavy rain. Others can accelerate to more than 60 mph.

Why do hurricanes travel so fast? ›

The prevailing winds that surround a hurricane, also known as the environmental wind field, are what guide a hurricane along its path. The hurricane propagates in the direction of this wind field, which also factors into the system's propagation speed.

Why does a hurricane weaken when it hits land? ›

Hurricanes usually weaken when they hit land, because they are no longer being fed by the energy from the warm ocean waters. However, they often move far inland, dumping many inches of rain and causing lots of wind damage before they die out completely.

What happens to the strength of a hurricane once it hits land? ›

When hurricanes make landfall, they begin to decrease in strength because they no longer have the ocean water from which to gain energy. However, they are still dangerous and can cause much damage.

Why do hurricanes normally lose strength as they make landfall? ›

As a hurricane moves over cooler water or hits land, it loses the warm water that fuels it and begins to weaken. But dangerous winds can still cause damage, and storm surges—when a strong storm pushes ocean water ashore—can flood coastal areas with more than 20 feet of water.

What two factors cause a hurricane to lose strength over land? ›

Hurricanes can lose their energy through two main processes:
  • Landfall: When a hurricane makes landfall, it moves away from the warm ocean waters that fuel its energy, causing it to lose strength. ...
  • Vertical Wind Shear: Vertical wind shear refers to the change in wind direction and speed with increasing altitude.
Nov 23, 2023

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