Perilous Times and Climate Change
Powerful Hurricane Karl smashes into Mexico
Waves hit sunshades at Maracaibo beach in Nautla, Mexico, on Friday.
Hurricane Karl made landfall near Veracruz Friday.
VERACRUZ, Mexico (AP) — Hurricane Karl smashed into Mexico's Gulf Coast
on Friday, creating havoc in the major port city of Veracruz and
forcing the country to shut down its only nuclear power plant and its
central Gulf Coast oil platforms.
The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Karl's eye hit about
10 miles northwest of Veracruz.with sustained winds of 115 mph.
Veracruz civil protection chief Isidro Cano Luna said the storm already
had caused widespread damage, knocking down trees, billboards and power
poles. He said there had not been a storm like it since Hurricane Janet
hit in September 1955.
Karl's winds were down to 110 mph by early afternoon as it began to
march toward the west
While it is expected to steadily weaken as it moves inland, it was
still likely to be at hurricane force when it reaches the state capital
of Jalapa, 60 miles from the coast, said that city's Mayor David
Velasco Chedraui.
It was projected to slog across central Mexico, drenching Mexico City,
after dumping heavy rain into the mountainous, flood-prone region of
Veracruz where a storm killed more than 300 people in 1999, most in
landslides.
"The hurricane is following a course that will also impact the mountain
areas," Herrera said. "We are releasing more water from the reservoirs,
which could be overwhelmed by the rain."
State-owned Petroleos Mexicanos closed 14 production wells in the
northern part of the state and evacuated workers from some oil
platforms, the company said in a statement late Thursday.
Workers also were evacuated from the Laguna Verde plant, which was shut
down, along with residents in the nearby town of Farallon and in
coastal towns of Cardel and Palma Sola, where a resident reported 20
families trapped by flooding.
"We asked for help because right now we have no way to get out, said
Palma Sola resident Agustin Tlapa. "We're totally flooded."
Flights were canceled into Veracruz city were shut down.
Authorities in Veracruz state — whose southern half has suffered severe
flooding over the past few weeks — preparing sleeping mats, bottled
water and other supplies for anyone taking refuge in shelters.
About 80,000 people have had their homes damaged and nine people have
been killed in flooding from heavy rains in southern Veracruz since
Aug. 19. Officials expressed concern Karl could raise river levels
again, just as some residents are thinking of returning to their homes.
In the beach town of Tecolutla, just south of Poza Rica, fishermen and
operators of small tour boats began pulling their craft out of the
water.
Some people boarded up windows with sheets of plywood, lashed down
cooking gas tanks and reinforced doors and signs to prevent them from
being blow away by the hurricane's wind, said Tecolutla's civil defense
director, Edilberto Peralta.
"We are getting ready and warning people early, to avoid any loss of
human life," said Peralta, whose town of about 25,000 people was lashed
by Hurricane Dean in 2007 and severely flooded by a tropical depression
in 1999. "We are ready to take drastic measures."
He said officials were considering whether any residents needed to
evacuate their homes.
The port of Tuxpan was closed to small craft Thursday, and Port Capt.
Gaspar Cime said larger vessels would be banned later in the day.
Tuxpan has about 135,000 people.
Meanwhile, Hurricane Igor's top winds weakened Friday to 115 mph on a
track that could take it over Bermuda by Monday. The government of
Bermuda issued a hurricane warning.
Farther east over the Atlantic, Hurricane Julia strengthened slightly
early Friday, though remained a Category 1 storm with maximum sustained
winds of 85 mph.
Karl could cause storm surges of 6 to 9 feet and "large and destructive
waves," as well as dump up to 15 inches of rain in some areas of
Veracruz state, thehurricane center said in a statement.
As a tropical storm, Karl hit Yucatan on Wednesday, downing tree limbs
and causing power outages. The storm made landfall on the Mexican
Caribbean coast about midway between the cruise ship port of Majahual
and the coastal town of Xcalak.