Showing posts with label Disaster News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Disaster News. Show all posts

Swine Flu Spreads to Most U.S. States?

Posted by Tegap Jitu Enterprise | 7:43 AM | , , , , , | 0 comments »

Swine flu has spread to 30 U.S. states and the number of countries with confirmed cases jumped to 20 from two in little more than a week. The expansion comes as Mexico’s president said his nation is winning the battle against the virus and may return to normal this week.

Officially called H1N1, the virus is probably circulating in “virtually all” U.S. states, Anne Schuchat of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said yesterday. First reported in the U.S. and Mexico, H1N1 also has been confirmed in Central America, Europe, the Middle East, Asia and New Zealand.

Declaration of a pandemic is imminent, the World Health Organization said over the weekend. Globally, health officials have said they’re bracing for the possibility of the disease worsening even as Mexico’s health minister yesterday said the outbreak there was declining. Mexico has been hardest hit, saying it’s had 590 infections and 22 deaths.

“We’re not out of the woods yet,” said Schuchat, interim deputy of the CDC’s science and public health program, in referring to the U.S. outbreak. “I do expect more cases, more severe cases, and I do expect more deaths.”

Schuchat said that she was “particularly concerned” about what will happen when the flu season starts for the Northern Hemisphere. That usually coincides with the fall, around late September, the CDC said on its Web site.

Mexican Outbreak

Mexico’s outbreak probably peaked last week and patients are responding well to antiviral treatments, Health Minister Jose Cordova said yesterday. The virus has been confirmed in 23 of Mexico’s 31 states and the capital district.

“Mexico is trying to return to normalcy as soon as possible,” President Felipe Calderon said late yesterday, adding that it was too soon to tally the economic cost. “We are going to win this battle.”

Still, Margaret Chan, director-general of the World Health Organization, warned that the declining mortality rate from the flu in Mexico didn’t mean the threat of a pandemic had subsided, the Financial Times reported, citing Chan. The virus may return “with a vengeance,” Chan said, according to the report.

The U.S. CDC reported 226 cases in 30 U.S. states, with one death, a 22-month-old child who had traveled from Mexico and died April 27 at a Houston hospital. The number of people with flu in the U.S. is increasing at a time when the typical season would be at its end, Schuchat said.

Spreads Easily

“It does spread very easily,” Richard Besser, the acting head of the CDC, said in an interview on ABC News yesterday. “The word out of New York City where they had a school cluster is it spread very rapidly through that school. But what they were seeing was disease that was not that severe, and when it transmitted to people in the families, they were seeing disease that was not that severe, and that’s encouraging.”

The WHO, a Geneva-based agency of the United Nations, today added Colombia and El Salvador to the list of countries with confirmed cases. The other nations are Austria, Canada, Costa Rica, Denmark, France, Germany, China (Hong Kong), Ireland, Israel, Italy, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, the U.K., and the U.S.

Canadian health officials on May 2 reported the world’s first known case of swine flu jumping to pigs from a human, probably after a farm worker in the province of Alberta became ill during a trip to Mexico. Hundreds of pigs on the farm showed symptoms of the same H1N1 strain in humans and were recovering, according to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

Infected Swine

Pigs are an ideal breeding ground for new forms of the flu, and further genetic scrambling can result in deadlier forms of the new swine flu, said Nancy Cox, chief of the flu division at the Center for the Immunization and Respiratory Disease at the Atlanta-based CDC.

The animals serve as a “wonderful mixing vessel” for bird, human and swine viruses, Cox said. The process of two viruses merging to form a new virus, called reassortment, can also take place in humans.

New viruses formed through reassortment can have different properties than either of the two “parental viruses,” she said, sometimes producing deadlier diseases and complicating vaccine production.

The three main seasonal flu strains -- H3N2, another form of H1N1, and type-B -- cause 250,000 to 500,000 deaths a year globally, according to the WHO. The new flu’s symptoms are similar: aches, coughing, and fever. The CDC says people with the swine flu are more likely to have diarrhea.

No Immunity

Even if swine-flu symptoms are mild, the ease with which the new virus can spread among a world population with no natural immunity makes it a threat, health officials said.

Data so far suggest the virus is striking younger patients than is typical for influenza, and younger patients than usual are entering hospitals, Schuchat said. “Very few” patients with swine flu are older than 50, and the median age is 17. It’s possible that the elderly have greater immunity.

The WHO raised its six-tier alert to 5 on April 29 and a further elevation would signal a pandemic, alerting governments to carry out plans to curb the disease.

“I would still propose that a pandemic is imminent,” said Michael Ryan, the agency’s director of global alert and response, at a news conference May 2.

WHO Alert

International health experts said the world is now closer to another influenza pandemic than at any time since 1968, when the last of the previous century’s three pandemics occurred. The WHO hasn’t had a phase 6 alert since it introduced the six-level system in 2005. Before last week, the warning had been at phase 3 since 2007, when it was elevated for an outbreak of avian influenza, according to the WHO Web site.

The new flu strain has now struck more people than the H5N1 avian influenza that emerged in 2003. That illness killed more than half of the 421 who contracted the malady worldwide. Unlike swine flu, it didn’t spread from person to person.

The Spanish flu of 1918, another version of bird flu, killed as many as 50 million people in one of history’s deadliest outbreaks.

“We’re not seeing the factors that were associated with the 1918 pandemic, we’re not seeing the factors that were associated with other H1N1 viruses, and that’s encouraging,” the CDC’s Besser said. Because the virus is new and possibly evolving, “I don’t think it’s time to let our guard down.”

Flu Shots

The U.S. is hastening production of its annual flu shots based on strains identified before the H1N1 outbreak, said Kathleen Sebelius, who was confirmed as the U.S. Health and Human Services secretary last week. That will make capacity available if vaccines are needed for swine flu, she said.

“We are ramping up and accelerating the production of seasonal flu vaccine to make sure that we kind of clear the decks,” she said on “This Week,” an ABC News program, yesterday. “Ultimately the scientists will tell us whether or not production of that vaccine makes sense.”

Batches of seed virus are being developed for potential vaccine production, according to the WHO. Sanofi-Aventis SA of Paris, Baxter International Inc. of Deerfield, Illinois, and GlaxoSmithKline Plc of London, are talking with world health authorities about producing shots, the agency said.

Authorities advised hand-washing, hygiene and staying home if sick as the most effective ways to control the outbreak. The WHO and CDC said closing borders or killing animals are costly steps that wouldn’t slow the spread of flu.

Prevention in humans

Prevention of pig to human transmission
Swine can be infected by both avian and human influenza strains of influenza, and therefore are hosts where the antigenic shifts can occur that create new influenza strains.
The transmission from swine to human is believed to occur mainly in swine farms where farmers are in close contact with live pigs. Although strains of swine influenza are usually not able to infect humans this may occasionally happen, so farmers and veterinarians are encouraged to use a face mask when dealing with infected animals. The use of vaccines on swine to prevent their infection is a major method of limiting swine to human transmission. Risk factors that may contribute to swine-to-human transmission include smoking and not wearing gloves when working with sick animals.

Swine Flu Spreads to Most U.S. States?

Posted by Tegap Jitu Enterprise | 7:43 AM | , , , , , | 0 comments »

Swine flu has spread to 30 U.S. states and the number of countries with confirmed cases jumped to 20 from two in little more than a week. The expansion comes as Mexico’s president said his nation is winning the battle against the virus and may return to normal this week.

Officially called H1N1, the virus is probably circulating in “virtually all” U.S. states, Anne Schuchat of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said yesterday. First reported in the U.S. and Mexico, H1N1 also has been confirmed in Central America, Europe, the Middle East, Asia and New Zealand.

Declaration of a pandemic is imminent, the World Health Organization said over the weekend. Globally, health officials have said they’re bracing for the possibility of the disease worsening even as Mexico’s health minister yesterday said the outbreak there was declining. Mexico has been hardest hit, saying it’s had 590 infections and 22 deaths.

“We’re not out of the woods yet,” said Schuchat, interim deputy of the CDC’s science and public health program, in referring to the U.S. outbreak. “I do expect more cases, more severe cases, and I do expect more deaths.”

Schuchat said that she was “particularly concerned” about what will happen when the flu season starts for the Northern Hemisphere. That usually coincides with the fall, around late September, the CDC said on its Web site.

Mexican Outbreak

Mexico’s outbreak probably peaked last week and patients are responding well to antiviral treatments, Health Minister Jose Cordova said yesterday. The virus has been confirmed in 23 of Mexico’s 31 states and the capital district.

“Mexico is trying to return to normalcy as soon as possible,” President Felipe Calderon said late yesterday, adding that it was too soon to tally the economic cost. “We are going to win this battle.”

Still, Margaret Chan, director-general of the World Health Organization, warned that the declining mortality rate from the flu in Mexico didn’t mean the threat of a pandemic had subsided, the Financial Times reported, citing Chan. The virus may return “with a vengeance,” Chan said, according to the report.

The U.S. CDC reported 226 cases in 30 U.S. states, with one death, a 22-month-old child who had traveled from Mexico and died April 27 at a Houston hospital. The number of people with flu in the U.S. is increasing at a time when the typical season would be at its end, Schuchat said.

Spreads Easily

“It does spread very easily,” Richard Besser, the acting head of the CDC, said in an interview on ABC News yesterday. “The word out of New York City where they had a school cluster is it spread very rapidly through that school. But what they were seeing was disease that was not that severe, and when it transmitted to people in the families, they were seeing disease that was not that severe, and that’s encouraging.”

The WHO, a Geneva-based agency of the United Nations, today added Colombia and El Salvador to the list of countries with confirmed cases. The other nations are Austria, Canada, Costa Rica, Denmark, France, Germany, China (Hong Kong), Ireland, Israel, Italy, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, the U.K., and the U.S.

Canadian health officials on May 2 reported the world’s first known case of swine flu jumping to pigs from a human, probably after a farm worker in the province of Alberta became ill during a trip to Mexico. Hundreds of pigs on the farm showed symptoms of the same H1N1 strain in humans and were recovering, according to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

Infected Swine

Pigs are an ideal breeding ground for new forms of the flu, and further genetic scrambling can result in deadlier forms of the new swine flu, said Nancy Cox, chief of the flu division at the Center for the Immunization and Respiratory Disease at the Atlanta-based CDC.

The animals serve as a “wonderful mixing vessel” for bird, human and swine viruses, Cox said. The process of two viruses merging to form a new virus, called reassortment, can also take place in humans.

New viruses formed through reassortment can have different properties than either of the two “parental viruses,” she said, sometimes producing deadlier diseases and complicating vaccine production.

The three main seasonal flu strains -- H3N2, another form of H1N1, and type-B -- cause 250,000 to 500,000 deaths a year globally, according to the WHO. The new flu’s symptoms are similar: aches, coughing, and fever. The CDC says people with the swine flu are more likely to have diarrhea.

No Immunity

Even if swine-flu symptoms are mild, the ease with which the new virus can spread among a world population with no natural immunity makes it a threat, health officials said.

Data so far suggest the virus is striking younger patients than is typical for influenza, and younger patients than usual are entering hospitals, Schuchat said. “Very few” patients with swine flu are older than 50, and the median age is 17. It’s possible that the elderly have greater immunity.

The WHO raised its six-tier alert to 5 on April 29 and a further elevation would signal a pandemic, alerting governments to carry out plans to curb the disease.

“I would still propose that a pandemic is imminent,” said Michael Ryan, the agency’s director of global alert and response, at a news conference May 2.

WHO Alert

International health experts said the world is now closer to another influenza pandemic than at any time since 1968, when the last of the previous century’s three pandemics occurred. The WHO hasn’t had a phase 6 alert since it introduced the six-level system in 2005. Before last week, the warning had been at phase 3 since 2007, when it was elevated for an outbreak of avian influenza, according to the WHO Web site.

The new flu strain has now struck more people than the H5N1 avian influenza that emerged in 2003. That illness killed more than half of the 421 who contracted the malady worldwide. Unlike swine flu, it didn’t spread from person to person.

The Spanish flu of 1918, another version of bird flu, killed as many as 50 million people in one of history’s deadliest outbreaks.

“We’re not seeing the factors that were associated with the 1918 pandemic, we’re not seeing the factors that were associated with other H1N1 viruses, and that’s encouraging,” the CDC’s Besser said. Because the virus is new and possibly evolving, “I don’t think it’s time to let our guard down.”

Flu Shots

The U.S. is hastening production of its annual flu shots based on strains identified before the H1N1 outbreak, said Kathleen Sebelius, who was confirmed as the U.S. Health and Human Services secretary last week. That will make capacity available if vaccines are needed for swine flu, she said.

“We are ramping up and accelerating the production of seasonal flu vaccine to make sure that we kind of clear the decks,” she said on “This Week,” an ABC News program, yesterday. “Ultimately the scientists will tell us whether or not production of that vaccine makes sense.”

Batches of seed virus are being developed for potential vaccine production, according to the WHO. Sanofi-Aventis SA of Paris, Baxter International Inc. of Deerfield, Illinois, and GlaxoSmithKline Plc of London, are talking with world health authorities about producing shots, the agency said.

Authorities advised hand-washing, hygiene and staying home if sick as the most effective ways to control the outbreak. The WHO and CDC said closing borders or killing animals are costly steps that wouldn’t slow the spread of flu.


Credited to WIKIPEDIA


Swine influenza
(also called swine flu, hog flu, and pig flu) refers to influenza caused by those strains of influenza virus, called swine influenza virus (SIV), that usually infect pigs. Swine influenza is common in pigs in the midwestern United States (and occasionally in other states), Mexico, Canada, South America, Europe (including the United Kingdom, Sweden, and Italy), Kenya, Mainland China, Taiwan, Japan and other parts of eastern Asia.

The drama between China and Mexico over the H1N1 flu is spilling over into air space, as each country has announced plans to send planes to fetch its citizens from the other.

However, there may be a bit more diplomatic wrangling to come before anyone gets repatriated.

On Saturday, China suspended all flights from Mexico after a 25-year-old man later diagnosed with H1N1 transited through Shanghai en route to Hong Kong from Mexico City. One problem: there are still around 120 PRC citizens in Mexico who need to get home. So China said it would charter a plane to bring them back.

China’s civil aviation administration first asked Shanghai-based China Eastern Airlines to make the flight, and airline planned to send a 400-seat Airbus A340-600, according to the South China Morning Post (subscription required). However, that flight was canceled, reportedly because the airport in Tijuana didn’t have a runway long enough for the plane to land.

Next, authorities turned to the Guangzhou based China Southern Airlines, which said one of its planes left for Los Angeles on Sunday night with the intent of flying onwards to Mexico. But the flight was canceled, for reasons that remain murky. Official news agency Xinhua did not give a reason for the cancellation, though it cited the airline as saying that “it was fully prepared for the charter mission, but it was up to the government as to if and when to implement it. ” The state-run China Daily, meanwhile, cited a Dragon TV report that China Southern was unable to reach a landing arrangement with Mexican airports.

Perhaps China Southern will be able to fulfill its mission if China allows Mexico to send its own charter plane to pick up Mexican citizens in China. Following reports that dozens of Mexicans have been involuntarily quarantined in China, a Mexican official said that Mexico would charter an AeroMexico plane to pick up any Mexicans who wish to leave China, AP reports, though the official could not say whether the quarantined citizens would be given priority.
H1N1 flu is spilling over into air space??


Petroleum (L. petroleum, from Greek πετρέλαιον, lit. "rock oil", first used in the treatise De re metallica published in 1556 by the German mineralogist Georg Bauer, known as Georgius Agricola) or crude oil is a naturally occurring, flammable liquid found in rock formations in the Earth consisting of a complex mixture of hydrocarbons of various molecular weights, plus other organic compounds.


Oil News : Oil falls in Asia as bailout talks falter!!


SINGAPORE -Oil prices fell below $107 a barrel in Asia Friday on investor concern that faltering negotiations in Washington may sabotage a bailout plan to stabilize the U.S. financial system, which could drag on global growth and undermine crude demand.
Light, sweet crude for November delivery was down $1.32 to $106.70 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange midday in Singapore. The contract rose overnight $2.29 to settle at $108.02.
"The bailout is a real focus of the market because it's seen as being quite important to the direction of the economy," said David Moore, a commodity strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney.
"To the extent that the latest news suggests it's not going to be passed as quickly as markets had thought, that would have an impact on the oil price," he said.
Negotiations among congressional leaders broke down late Thursday. Democrats blamed the House Republicans for the apparent stalemate. Those conservatives have complained that the $700 billion plan would be too costly for taxpayers and would be an unacceptable federal intrusion into private business.
One group of House Republican lawmakers circulated an alternative that would put much less focus on a government takeover of failing institutions' sour assets.
Talks were to resume Friday on the effort to bail out failing financial institutions and restart the flow of credit that has begun to starve the national economy.
Earlier Thursday, U.S. President George W. Bush hosted presidential rivals John McCain and Barack Obama and top congressional leaders at the White House in a bid to show unity in resolving a national financial crisis, but it broke up with conflicts in plain view.
"The stronger the commitment to the relief program, the more positive that would be seen toward stabilizing the U.S. financials," Moore said. "As these negotiations wax and wean, it's affecting a whole range of markets."
Prices were supported by tight global supply, especially in the U.S., where the impact of Hurricane Ike and Gustav is still being felt on Gulf of Mexico oil operations.
Oil companies are restaffing Gulf platforms and rigs after the storms plowed through the region, but most production remains offline. Nearly 63 percent of crude output and 57 percent of natural gas production was still shut-in as of Wednesday, the U.S. Minerals Management Service said.
Damage to U.S. Gulf Coast refineries prompted Mexican state oil company Pemex to reduce its daily output by 250,000 barrels a day. The company said it expects production to be back to normal by the end of the week.
"The hurricanes and their aftermath have disrupted production," Moore said. "It's run down stocks in the U.S. and tightened market conditions."
In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures fell 2.58 cents to $3.00 a gallon, while gasoline prices dropped 3.13 cents to $2.666 a gallon. Natural gas for October delivery fell 0.2 cents to $7.722 per 1,000 cubic feet.
In London, November Brent crude fell $1.17 to $103.43 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.


Consumption rates
There are two main ways to measure the oil consumption rates of countries: by population or by gross domestic product (GDP). This metric is important in the global debate over oil consumption/energy consumption/climate change because it takes social and economic considerations into account when scoring countries on their oil consumption/energy consumption/climate change goals. Nations such as China and India with large populations tend to promote the use of population based metrics, while nations with large economies such as the United States would tend to promote the GDP based metric


Oil News : Oil falls in Asia as bailout talks falter!!


World News : Airplane crash in Russia 83 passengers & 5 Crew Died!!

MOSCOW - A plane carrying 88 people has crashed in central Russia, killing all on board, an emergency official said Sunday.

The Boeing-737 traveling from Moscow to Perm went down around 3:40 a.m. Sunday, Emergency Situations Ministry spokeswoman Irina Andrianova said.

The plane, operated by a division of Aeroflot, was on its approach to land in Perm when it crashed into an unpopulated area of the city, she said. A total of 82 passengers, including seven children, and six crew were on board, she said.

She said there was no damage or deaths on the ground and investigators were working to determine what caused the incident.

There was no indication of a terrorist attack, she said.

Perm is about 750 miles east of Moscow.

Perm emergency official Valery Tibunov said in televsied comments that the plane fell onto train tracks just a few dozen meters (yards) from an apartment building.

Russia and the other former Soviet republics have some the world's worst air traffic safety records, according to the International Air Transport Association.

Experts have blamed weak government controls, poor pilot training and a cost-cutting mentality among many carriers that affects safety.

Sunday's crash was the second involving a Boeing 737 in the former Soviet Union in the past month. A Boeing flying from the Central Asian nation of Kyrgystan to Iran crashed shortly after takeoff on Aug. 24, killing 56 people.



NEW YORK - Oil prices spiked to a new record above $147 a barrel Friday, as rising hostilities between the West and Iran and the potential for attacks on Nigerian oil facilities gave investors reason to rush back into the energy markets.

Another drop in the U.S. dollar also lured buyers.

The resurgence in crude prices not only raises the concern that $4-a-gallon gasoline is here to stay for U.S. drivers — it also means that heating homes could get significantly more expensive this winter. Heating oil futures surged on the New York Mercantile Exchange to a record of more than $4.15 a gallon, and natural gas also rose.

"If you think your gasoline bills are expensive now, wait till you get your home heating bill this winter," said Stephen Schork, an analyst and trader in Villanova, Pa.

The problem is that while U.S. consumer demand is waning as people try to save money, other factors are keeping energy costs high. Those factors include the weak dollar, refineries cutting back on production and relatively resilient demand for diesel fuel. Diesel is a distillate fuel that is produced and distributed similarly to heating oil, so diesel demand often affects the price of heating oil.

The other big reason gasoline and heating bills are likely to stay high: unrest in the Middle East and Africa.

"The bulls are still able to spin a bullish case on this — not based so much on the fundamentals, but on a lot of 'What if?' scenarios," Schork said.

Iran, which has long been under U.N. scrutiny for its uranium enrichment program, has been testing missiles this week, including a new missile capable of reaching Israel. On Thursday, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice warned the oil-producing nation that the United States will defend its allies, and Iran responded with another missile launch. Neither the United States nor Israel has ruled out a military strike on Iran.

Traders fear the oil producing nation could block the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 40 percent of the world's tanker traffic passes.

"There's always a fear premium in pricing. The tensions in Iran and the threat of supply disruption will help support oil prices," said Jeff Brown, managing director of FACTS Global Energy in Singapore.

On Friday, light, sweet crude for August delivery soared to an all-time high of $147.27 a barrel, before pulling back slightly to trade at $146.60, up $4.94.

Crude had fallen by nearly $10 a barrel over two days at the start of the week, but rebounded by more than $5 a barrel Thursday as anxiety heightened about Middle East and Nigerian supplies being disrupted.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries warned Thursday it cannot replace the shortfall if Iran is attacked and takes its crude supplies off the market.

Also Thursday, Nigeria's main militant group said it would resume attacks in the oil-rich region because of Britain's recent vow to back the government in the conflict there. Over the past two years, attacks have lowered the nation's typical daily oil output by a quarter.

JBC Energy in Vienna, Austria, said the news about Iran and Nigeria — as well as a reported threat of a strike by oil workers in Brazil — were "enough to wake the market from its two-day slumber."

Meanwhile, the dollar weakened against other major currencies Friday. The falling dollar has been a major factor behind the surge in crude oil, which is denominated in dollars; oil's rise has not been as severe for countries with stronger currencies, and meanwhile, traders have been using commodities as a hedge against the tumbling U.S. currency.

August Brent crude rose to a new trading record of $147.50 before pulling back to trade $4.82 higher at $146.85 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures rose to a trading record of $4.1586 before retreating to $4.1457 a gallon, up 10.83 cents.

Gasoline futures also rose to a new trading record of $3.631 a gallon before easing back to $3.6140, up 10.31 cents.

The average U.S. retail price for gasoline was at $4.096 a gallon, down slightly from the record $4.108 a gallon reached on Monday, according to auto club AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and Wright Express.

Natural gas futures rose 2.7 cents to $12.329 per 1,000 cubic feet, after rising as high as $13.694.

Natural gas, because it is not a crude oil product, is inexpensive compared to heating oil. But as the winter approaches, the fuel has the potential to shoot higher as energy traders look for cheaper places to put their money, Schork said.

Heating oil is used mostly in the Northeast United States; homes in most other regions of the country use natural gas.

It's possible for people to save some money on heating, but it's not easy to slash the bill significantly.

"We've been building these ridiculous McMansions over the past few years. It's harder to trade in a McMansion than it is an SUV," Schork said. "But you can turn your thermostat down and throw on a sweater."


Disaster News :Tropical Storm Bertha

MIAMI -Tropical Storm Bertha, moving briskly across open ocean waters, may strengthen into the first hurricane of the 2008 Atlantic storm season sometime during the next 48 hours, U.S. weather forecasters said on Sunday.
ertha, which formed on Thursday near the Cape Verde islands off Africa, had maximum sustained winds approaching 50 miles per hour (85 km per hour) at 11 a.m. EDT and was heading west at 21 mph (33 kph), the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said.

"Gradual strengthening is expected during the next 48 hours, and Bertha could become a hurricane during that time," the forecasters said in an advisory.

Storms are judged to be hurricanes when their wind speed reaches at least 74 mph (119 kph).

Bertha is nowhere near land, and the hurricane center's tracking forecasts have the storm staying at sea and taking a general west-northwest route over the next five days. The storm's speed was expected to ease during the next two days.

"It is much too early to determine if Bertha will eventually affect any land areas," the forecasters said.

The storm's center was near latitude 17.4 north and longitude 45.1 west, or about 1,185 miles east of the northern Leeward Islands.

Bertha is the second tropical storm of what has been predicted to be an above-average storm season in the Atlantic and Caribbean.

Energy markets closely monitor tropical storms in the Atlantic because of the potential for them to threaten oil installations in the Gulf of Mexico. The 2004 and 2005 hurricane seasons, which included Katrina, the hurricane that swamped New Orleans, left dozens of oil rigs toppled or damaged and sent crude prices to what were then record highs.

The Atlantic-Caribbean hurricane season runs from June 1 to the end of November, with August and September usually the busiest months.