Showing posts with label storm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label storm. Show all posts



World News : Tropical Storm Hanna was expected to move across the Bahamas??

Tropical Storm Hanna was a moderately strong tropical storm during the 2002 Atlantic hurricane season. The eighth storm of the 2002 season, Hanna was one of six tropical cyclones to make landfall in the United States during the 2002 season. Hanna formed in the Gulf of Mexico and moved northward, where it first made landfall in eastern Louisiana and then along the Mississippi/Alabama border.

Hanna caused minor damage as a tropical cyclone. In Alabama, Mississippi, and Georgia, heavy rainfall from the storm caused moderate flooding. Total damage from the storm amounted to $20.3 million dollars (2002 USD, $22.3 million 2006 USD) and there were three drowning fatalities in Florida.

Tropical Storm Hanna was expected to move across the Bahamas on Wednesday and Thursday and to hit the U.S. on Friday, somewhere between South Florida and the Carolinas, forecasters said.

Hanna's winds were at 60 mph, but it was expected to strengthen and could regain hurricane status by Thursday, the National Hurricane Center said.

At 8 a.m. ET Wednesday, Hanna was about 105 miles southeast of Great Inagua Island in the Bahamas, the hurricane center said.

It was moving eastward at about 5 mph and was expected to speed up and make a turn to the northwest later Wednesday, the center said. It described Hanna's path as "erratic."

Florida Gov. Charlie Crist declared a state of emergency Tuesday to get ready for Hanna, The Associated Press reported. Florida could get flash floods and wind gusts of up to 111 mph, he told the AP.
Following Hanna is Tropical Storm Ike, which formed Monday, and is forecast to cross into the Caribbean as a hurricane on Saturday or Sunday. Ike is heading toward the Caribbean at 18 mph with top wind speeds of 65 mph, the hurricane center said at 5 a.m. ET.

It could strike the Turks and Caicos Islands just south of the Bahamas by Sunday. iReport.com: Watch Hanna lash the Turks and Caicos Islands

Behind Ike is Tropical Storm Josephine, with top winds near 60 mph, the hurricane center said at 5 a.m. ET. Josephine is about 220 miles west-southwest of the southernmost Cape Verde Islands off western Africa.

Hanna caused severe flooding in Haiti's port city of Gonaives, and rescue efforts have been hampered because of flooded bridges and roads, some of which Hurricane Gustav washed out last week, a local official said.

Authorities said the storm killed 23 people in Haiti, the AP reported.

Two university students were swept away by flowing water in Puerto Rico, and at least one of them was killed, according to the AP

World News : Tropical Storm Hanna was expected to move across the Bahamas??

World News: Hurricane Gustav hit Cuba like a nuclear bomb!!

Gustav slammed into western Cuba with winds of 150mph, damaging or destroying 100,000 homes and leaving the authorities struggling to feed its people.

While much of the world's attention has been focused on residents fleeing America's Gulf Coast, the ailing 82-year-old has said that Cuba now faces "a battle to feed" its hurricane victims on the Isle of Youth, 40 miles off Cuba's southwestern coast.

Castro, writing in his regular internet column, said that agriculture had been badly affected and that television shots from the Isle of Youth reminded him of the Japanese city destroyed by a US nuclear bomb in 1945 at the end of World War Two.

Meanwhile, the mayor of New Orleans, Ray Nagin, has given residents the go-ahead to return to the city at midnight on Wednesday night but warned that many homes would be without electricity or working toilets and that a dusk-to-dawn curfew would still be in place.

"It's my humble opinion that the city is still in a very, very vulnerable state," Mr Nagin said.

Hundreds of thousands of people are eager to return home after spending several days in hot, overcrowded shelters but it is thought that nearly 800,000 homes in Louisiana are without power, including about 77,000 in New Orleans.

Elsewhere, President Bush is keeping a hands-on profile in the aftermath of the hurricane, in contrast to his administration's response to Hurricane Katrina three years ago.

Mr Bush is due to fly to the Gulf Coast to survey the storm damage on Wednesday.

Prior to his departure Mr Bush said: "We are thankful that the damage in New Orleans and across the Gulf Coast was less than many had feared.

"I commend the governors of Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas for their sure-handed response and seamless coordination with the federal government.

"I thank all of the wonderful volunteers who stepped forward to help their brothers and sisters in need," he told the Republican National Convention via satellite.

The President urged Gulf Coast residents to wait for local officials to give them the green light before returning home.

However, any return could be premature as another three storms are on the way.

Ray Nagin declared Gustav to be the "mother of all storms" and many people may decide to ignore calls to flee after Gustav did not cause the carnage it was expected to amid claims the authorities overreacted in demanding people leave their homes.

Catherine Jones, 53, of Silsbee, Texas, said: "Next time, it's going to be bad because people who evacuated likes us aren't going to evacuate. They jumped the gun," she added.

Officials defended the decision saying it was "better to be safe than sorry" after Katrina killed 1,600 people in 2005. Gustav has claimed nine lives in the US so far and there are still three months left in the Atlantic hurricane season. Three storms are currently lined up in the Atlantic.

Tropical Storm Hanna could strengthen into a hurricane and hit Florida and Georgia later in the week.

Hanna has already claimed 21 lives in Haiti and it is being closely followed by Tropical Storms Ike and Josephine.

World News: Hurricane Gustav hit Cuba like a nuclear bomb!!

Hurricane Gustav is the seventh tropical cyclone, third hurricane and second major hurricane of the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season. It formed on the morning of August 25, 2008 about 260 miles (420 km) southeast of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and rapidly strengthened into a tropical storm that afternoon and into a hurricane early on August 26. Later that day it made landfall near the Haitian town of Jacmel. As of August 31, 88 deaths have been attributed to Gustav in the Caribbean.

On September 1 at 9:30 a.m CDT (1430 UTC) the center of Gustav made landfall in the United States along the Louisiana coast near Cocodrie as a category 2 hurricane.

World News : Hurricane Gustav could stall over Louisiana and northeast Texas for several days??

NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (CNN)
-- As Hurricane Gustav neared Louisiana's coast Monday morning, forecasters warned the storm could stall over Louisiana and northeast Texas for several days, which would "exacerbate the threat of heavy rains and inland flooding."

Southern Louisiana's barrier islands and coast reported hurricane force winds and heavy rains from Gustav, which was centered about 80 miles south of New Orleans and about 20 miles south-southeast of Port Fourchon, Louisiana, at 8 a.m. (9 a.m. ET).

Power went out around 6 a.m. in the western part of downtown New Orleans and in the French Quarter 10 minutes later, CNN correspondents Chris Lawrence and Anderson Cooper reported.

The eye of Hurricane Gustav made landfall near Cocodrie, Louisiana, about 9:30 a.m. (10:30 a.m. ET), the National Hurricane Center said.

Gustav's top winds weakened to 110 mph (177 kph), downgrading it to a Category 2 storm, the NHC said.

Earlier predictions of a Category 4 storm, which would mean winds of at least 131 mph, and fresh memories of Katrina, which came ashore in 2005 with 127 mph winds, fueled the evacuation of 2 million residents from New Orleans and other parishes.

But Gustav never regained the strength lost over Cuba and by Monday morning NHC forecasters said its cloud pattern looked "a bit more ragged."

The latest discussion published by NHC forecasters said computer models show "Gustav or its remnants slowing to a crawl" over northeast Texas over the next three to five days.

"Such slow motion would exacerbate the threat of heavy rains and inland flooding," the forecasters said.

With hurricane force winds extending 70 miles from the center, the islands and shoreline are already in reach of Gustav's fury.

Sustained winds of 91 mph (147 kph) and gusts of 117 mph (189 kph) were measured in Southwest Pass, Louisiana during the 4 a.m. hour, the NHC said.

CNN's Ali Velshi was hunkered down in a house on Grand Isle, Louisiana, where only a handful of people remained.

When high winds first kicked up about 3:15 a.m. (4:15 a.m. ET) Monday the barrier island's electric power went out, Velshi said.

A storm surge of at least 14 feet is expected there, he said


World News : Hurricane Gustav could stall over Louisiana and northeast Texas for several days??


Hurricane Gustav Impact at Cuba

On Saturday August 30, 2008, Gustav made landfall on mainland Cuba near the community of Los Palacios in Pinar del Río—a region that produces much of the tobacco used to make the nation's famed cigars. In Los Palacios some 7,000 homes were roofless and many with their walls collapsed. The rice and banana farms sustained much damage.

At least 300,000 people were evacuated from Gustav's path as 140 mph (220 km/h) winds toppled telephone poles and fruit trees, shattered windows and tore off the tin roofs of homes.

Cuban authorities declared that Gustav is the worst hurricane to hit the country in 50 years. Authorities called the storm damage the worst since 1956. The 212 mph (341 km/h) wind gusts registered in the city of Paso Real de San Diego were the highest in Cuba's history, according to the provincial newspaper, the Guerrillero. Winds were so strong that the weather station instruments broke. Electricity was cut to a large part of the region as well.

Cuban Civil defense authorities declared there were "many people injured" on Isla de la Juventud, an island of 87,000 people south of the mainland. Nearly all the island's roads were washed out and some regions were heavily flooded. No fatalities have been reported in Cuba, despite the extreme damage.



World News :Katrina's Lessons Shape Reaction To Gustav??

Authorities in the Gulf Coast region report that mandatory evacuations ordered as Hurricane Gustav advances have been successful. By all accounts, the preparations for Gustav are a stark improvement over the chaos before and after Katrina.

In fact, if hurricanes can teach a lesson, Katrina provided a master class of how not to handle a storm, and Gustav offers a glimpse of the right way to prepare for a big one.

Rule number one: Leave!

Peggy Barcelona and her family were caging their menagerie Sunday as they prepared to flee their century-old house in St. Bernard Parish and drive to Mississippi, out of harm's way.

"We have four dachshunds, a shepherd, a lab, three cats, a ferret, a bird. And we have two horses we sent on already," she said.

The low-lying areas in Gustav's path were virtually deserted. The exodus went relatively smoothly.

But the sickening deja vu of waking up to another mass evacuation — and TV ads for companies that dry out waterlogged carpets — was just too much for some people.

"When I woke up this morning, I was completely immobilized with anxiety. I mean, I was like laying there thinking like, 'Oh my God, I'm not going to even get out of bed,'" said Ken Foster, a 43-year-old writer who lives in the Lower Ninth Ward with his three dogs, Zephyr, Sula and Brando.

He was one of the last ones to leave the Lower Ninth on Sunday, whipsawing between optimism and despair.

"I think a lot of people are feeling the same way. … Half your head is thinking we've gone through this before. We know better what to do, how to prepare. And the other half is thinking about how bad it can really be, and how there's little to prepare for when you're dealing with that much unknown," he said.

Foster's next-door neighbor is a contractor named Derwin Hill. At the same time Foster was putting his dogs in his car, Hill was about to lock up his newly renovated Ninth Ward home. He was taking all the family pictures and his wife's jewelry with him, and he planned to stow his belongings in the house higher in case the water started to rise again.

"This time we put all the clothes in the attic, we took all the pots out and set them on the counter. We did all the preparations inside the home, as well as outside the home. Because we know if we get any water this time, hopefully it'll just be rainwater, street flooding," he said.

Hill said this time he's confident the new levees on the Industrial Canal protecting the Ninth Ward will hold and, more importantly, there are no barges on the water to break free and slam into the dike, as happened before.

In another departure from pre-Katrina activity, Humvees full of National Guardsmen lumbered through the silent streets on Sunday.

Marty Rollins was installing a storm door in the Phoenix Tavern on Elysian Fields Avenue, where he tends bar.

"They're handling it much better," he said. "They seem like they learned a lot from the first one."

People have had particular praise for their new take-charge governor, Bobby Jindal. In comparison to the image of a rattled, indecisive Gov. Kathleen Blanco after Katrina, Jindal has been all over television relishing his new role as commander-in-chief of Louisiana's National Guard.

Despite public officials pleading for residents to leave, some people just didn't want to miss a good show.

"This will be my first real hurricane to go through," said New Jersey native Chris Maverick. "My family all wants me to leave. My friends are home and they're all like, 'Dude, you're crazy.' And I was like, this is a life experience I have to go through."

He sat on a front stoop in the Marigny neighborhood drinking a Pabst Blue Ribbon and smoking a Winston. The 26-year-old with bright red, dyed hair said he's a bartender on Bourbon Street. He and five friends were riding out Gustav here, planning to pass the time playing chess and card games and drinking beer.

"I didn't come here a year ago to move away every time everything gets a little blustery," he said. "Too many people in this world run from everything. It's like the American solution, let's just run away when there's a problem. I'm ready to confront."

In now-empty post-Katrina New Orleans, there are apparently very few who share his bravado.


World News :Katrina's Lessons Shape Reaction To Gustav??



World News : Now, Gustav moves through Caymans ??


GEORGE TOWN, Cayman Islands - Gustav became a hurricane again on Friday and moved through the Cayman Islands, the start of a buildup that could take it to the U.S. Gulf Coast as a fearsome Category-3 storm three years after Hurricane Katrina.

Gustav, which killed 71 people in the Caribbean, on Friday evening reached the Cayman Islands, a tiny offshore tax haven studded with resorts and cruise-ship souvenir shops, on track to next hit Cuba's cigar country and heading into the Gulf of Mexico by Sunday.
Well-heeled tourists fled Cayman hotels by air, while Katrina victims in Mississippi still living in emergency cottages and trailers were told to evacuate beginning this weekend.
Hotels on the Cayman Islands asked guests to leave, then after the airport closed prepared to shelter those who remained. Chris Smith, of Frederick, Maryland, said his hotel handed out wrist bands marked with guests' names and room numbers so that "if something happens they can quickly identify us."
"That was a little bit sobering," he said, standing outside the hotel with his luggage.
About 20 islanders waited for the storm in a high school gym.
"If people give you a shelter, you should take it," said Pamela Hall, 52.
The storm killed four people in a day-long march across the length of Jamaica, where it ripped off roofs and downed power lines. About 4,000 people were displaced from their homes, with about half relocated to shelters.
Prime Minister Bruce Golding said the government sent army helicopters Friday to rescue 31 people trapped by floods. At least 59 people died in Haiti and eight in the Dominican Republic.
The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Gustav could grow to a Category 3 storm, with winds above 111 mph (180 kph), by the time it hits the U.S. Gulf coast next week. Gustav could strike anywhere from the Florida Panhandle to Texas, but forecasters said there is a better-than-even chance that New Orleans will get slammed by at least tropical-storm-force winds.
As much as 80 percent of the Gulf of Mexico's oil and gas production could be shut down as a precaution if Gustav enters as a major storm, weather research firm Planalytics predicted. Oil companies have already evacuated hundreds of workers from offshore platforms.
Retail gas prices rose Friday for the first time in 43 days as analysts warned that a direct hit on Gulf energy infrastructure could send pump prices hurtling toward $5 a gallon. Crude oil prices ended slightly lower in a volatile session as some traders feared supply disruptions and others bet the government will release supplies from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
Late Friday night, Gustav was centered 25 miles (40 kms) west-southwest of Little Cayman Island, moving northwest near 10 mph (17 kph). The hurricane center said top winds were to near 80 mph (130 kph).
"Gustav could become a major hurricane near the time it crosses western Cuba," the hurricane center said.
Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Hanna was projected to curl westward into the Bahamas by early next week. It had sustained winds near 50 mph (85 kph).
Along the U.S. Gulf Coast, most commemorations of the Katrina anniversary were canceled because of Gustav, but in New Orleans a horse-drawn carriage took the bodies of Katrina's last seven unclaimed victims to burial.
President Bush declared an emergency in Louisiana, a move that allows the federal government to coordinate disaster relief and provide assistance in storm-affected areas.
New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin said an evacuation order was likely, though not before Saturday, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency said it expects a "huge number" of Gulf Coast residents will be told to leave the region this weekend.
Closer to the storm, workers at the Westin Causarina Hotel on Grand Cayman island shored up ground-floor rooms with sandbags.
"We've taken in all the balcony furniture, all the pool furniture, the marquees, tied up what needs to be tied up, cut down any coconuts," said hotel manager Dan Szydlowski.
Thunderstorms associated with Gustav already were bringing heavy downpours Friday to parts of central Cuba and evacuations were ordered in flood-prone areas.
Authorities in the tobacco-rich western Cuba, where Gustav is expected to cross the island, hauled 465,000 sacks of tobacco to higher ground for safekeeping and began distributing extra rations of milk and bread.


World News : Now, Gustav moves through Caymans ??

Although the storm was still in its formative stages on August 26,fears that Hurricane Gustav might eventually disrupt oil production in the Gulf of Mexico caused oil prices to rise.On August 27, U.S. oil and natural-gas companies began evacuating personnel from their oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico amid continued forecasts that Gustav would strengthen and move into the gulf.

Operationally, Gustav went from a tropical depression to a hurricane in 14 hours, tying Hurricane Humberto's record of 14 hours, although this may be challenged in post-season analysis.

Gustav made landfall in Haiti at approximately 1 p.m. EDT, about 10 miles (16 km) west of the city of Jacmel.While inland, Gustav's rains triggered a landslide in the community of Benet which killed one person.Two more were killed in southwestern Haiti when their house collapsed. Another two deaths were blamed on an explosion inside a house, thought to be related to Hurricane Gustav.The southern town of Jacmel, where the hurricane made landfall, was bisected by floodwaters.In total, fourteen deaths have been blamed on the storm in Haiti.In the Dominican Republic, a landslide in a rural area killed eight people.

World news : Tropical Storm Gustav Bring oil price hike??
The brief respite for consumers at the gasoline pump may come to an abrupt end if Tropical Storm Gustav slams into the petroleum-rich Gulf Coast and its numerous refineries, just as Americans begin packing up cars for the Labor Day weekend.

Gustav was downgraded from a hurricane to a tropical storm Wednesday after moving over Haiti, but forecasters expect it to regain strength and move into the Gulf of Mexico in a few days.

Oil companies with operations in the Gulf began removing nonessential workers from rigs, platforms and other facilities Wednesday morning, and refiners were preparing too.

There have been some minor production cuts, but so far, output has largely been unaffected.

Still, oil prices spiked more than $2 to above $118 a barrel, rising for a third day as Gustav spun toward the Gulf. Its approach is just days before the three-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, which along with Hurricane Rita devastated the region's energy infrastructure.

The U.S. Gulf Coast is home to nearly half the nation's refining capacity, while offshore the Gulf accounts for about 25 percent of domestic oil production and 15 percent of natural gas output.

Even a perceived threat to that infrastructure roils the energy markets.

Kenneth Medlock, an energy expert and adjunct economics professor at Rice University, said a run-up in gasoline prices as a storm approaches is not uncommon, prompted in part by fears of potential supply shortages in the storm's wake.

"Station owners have to value what's in their tanks based on what the replacement costs are -- what's it going to cost them to buy off the rack, basically," Medlock said. "So when that price goes up, they're going to start raising the price at the pump, although it's usually a short-term thing."

Jim Ritterbusch, president of energy consultancy Ritterbusch and Associates, said any refinery shutdowns would likely lead to a spike in retail gas prices.

Those prices have dropped for seven straight weeks and, at a national average of $3.686 per gallon, gasoline hasn't been this cheap in four months.

Even before a potential strike, Gustav may give Americans a jolt as they get ready for Labor Day weekend.

"There's a strong chance that by Friday we could see some fairly significant pump price increases," Ritterbusch said. "Crude can be replaced and brought in via tanker, but bringing a damaged refinery back up again can take a long time, as we saw with Katrina and Rita."

Business weather research firm Planalytics said Wednesday up to 80 percent of the Gulf's oil and gas production could be shutdown as a precaution if Gustav enters the region as a major storm.

Ben Brockwell, director of data, pricing and information services for the Oil Price Information Service in Wall, N.J., said a jump in prices is not unexpected as Gustav approaches, but he doesn't foresee a long-term spike unless the storm causes major damage.

Brockwell said the oil industry learned valuable lessons from Katrina and Rita and has made changes that should expedite its recovery after the next big blow.

Companies have spent hundreds of million dollars in the past few years to improve their operations. Platform moorings are stronger, pipelines are deeper, backup power is in greater supply.

For refiners, the two biggest challenges after Katrina and Rita passed were power disruptions and flooding. As such, some refiners have raised critical equipment above flood levels and enhanced plans to get backup power as quickly as possible.

"Katrina was an event that changed how the oil market reacts and responds to hurricane threats," Brockwell said.

Oil companies have strict protocols for removing workers from the Gulf, and they'd kicked those plans into high gear Wednesday.

Royal Dutch Shell PLC said it expected to evacuate 300 nonessential personnel Wednesday, and other producers, like BP PLC, were doing the same.

Transocean Inc., the world's largest offshore drilling contractor, said all 11 of its offshore drilling rigs in the Gulf were pulling up and securing drill pipe and other subsea equipment as a precaution. The company had evacuated 30 of its 1,550 workers in the Gulf as of Wednesday morning, with more expected to leave in the next few days.

Bill Day, spokesman for Valero Energy Corp., North America's largest refiner, said decisions on production would be made when more was known about the storm's severity and direction.

"With Gustav, we're watching day by day, hour by hour even," Day said.

World news : Tropical Storm Gustav Bring oil price hike??

Hurricane Gustav is the seventh tropical cyclone and third hurricane of the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season. It formed on the morning of August 25, about 260 miles (415 km) southeast of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and rapidly strengthened into a tropical storm that afternoon and into a hurricane early on August 26. Later that day it made landfall near the Haitian town of Jacmel. Twenty-two deaths have been blamed on Gustav.
Hurricane Gustav re-gained a pronounced eye as it made landfall on Haiti, near the town of Jacmel. As the hurricane moved over Haiti's mountainous terrain its circulation was disrupted and it lost a little strength.Although downgraded to a tropical storm, the system still had a pronounced eye in its mid- and upper-level structures. Its outflow improved throughout the night of August 26 and the system was not very disrupted when it moved back over water into the Gulf of Gonâve.However, the storm's movement slowed, and continued interraction with nearby Haiti, combined with the incursion of mid-level dry air from the northeast, resulted in further weakening during the day on August 27.The storm began a west-southwesterly movement that brought it closer to Jamaica. The morning of August 28, it was found that Gustav had either reformed further to the south or had moved further towards the south overnight than previously thought. The storm was also found to have restrengthened to nearly hurricane strength.

World news : Tropical Storm Gustav took in a new track???

MIAMI (AFP) - Tropical Storm Gustav took a turn on Thursday, moving south as it crept toward Jamaica in a new track that could spare the hurricane-scarred US city of New Orleans.

Gustav reformed to the south early Thursday and became "a little stronger," blowing winds of 85 kilometers per hour (50 miles), the US National Hurricane Center said in its latest advisory.

The eye of the storm, which already left 22 people dead in Haiti and the Dominican Republic, was expected to pass "very close" to Jamaica later Thursday, the US National Hurricane Center said.

Gustav, which struck Haiti as a Category One hurricane on Tuesday, could regain hurricane strength by Friday, the center warned.

Its new position has it passing south of Jamaica as a tropical storm and reaching Grand Cayman Island as a hurricane later in the week before passing between Mexico's Yucatan peninsula and Cuba's western tip, the center said.

The revised forecast also predicts that Gustav could reach Louisiana on Tuesday instead of Monday, making landfall in the central coast rather than the east, where the New Orleans lies.

The tropical storm pushed oil prices higher Wednesday on fears that the storm could strike rigs when it moves to the Gulf of Mexico.

At 0900 GMT, the storm was about 130 kilometers (80 miles) east of Kingston and 270 kilometers (170 miles) south of Guantanamo, Cuba, the center said.

With memories of the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina in 2005 still fresh, US federal and Louisiana state authorities prepared for the worst to avoid repeating the slow disaster response of three years ago.

Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal declared a state of emergency Wednesday and announced plans to begin evacuating coastal areas ahead of the storm.

"As long as there is a chance that we'll be in this storm, I'll be here in Louisiana," said Jindal, warning he may miss next week's Republican National Convention to name John McCain the party's presidential nominee.

The US Department of Homeland Security urged Gulf Coast residents to get ready for the storm.

"Regardless of its predicted path, it is important for citizens in the Gulf Coast region to listen to what their local officials are advising over the course of the next few days and to take these simple steps to prepare," said Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff.

New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin, who was criticized for his administration's botched response to Katrina, made plans to leave the Democratic National Convention early so he could also help the city prepare for the storm.

Jamaica and the tiny Cayman Islands, a British overseas territory, were under a hurricane watch.

But Jamaican tourism interests did not expect any fall out.

Josef Forstmayer, an executive of the Jamaica Hotel and Tourism Association, said things should be "pretty much back to normal" after Thursday.

A new tropical depression, meanwhile, formed in the Atlantic and has the potential to become the eighth tropical storm of the hurricane season on Thursday or Friday, the center said.

World news : Tropical Storm Gustav took in a new track???