- New Orleans is anticipating significant impact from Hurricane Ida.
- The tropical storm is now classified as a Category 1 hurricane.
- Further forecasts said that Ida could turn into a major Category 3 hurricane.
As as New Orleans braces for Hurricane Ida’s landfall, the city’s mayor has issued and order of the evacuation for all residents living outside the city’s levee system.
“Now is the time to start,” New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell said at a press conference on Friday as she urged New Orleans residents to pack up supplies and leave before the storm hits.
She particularly ordered everyone living outside the levee system that protects the area from flooding to evacuate to safer places, and advised those inside to consider leaving too.
Those inside the levee could also leave of their own volition, Cantrell said.
Serviciul Național de Meteorologie din SUA said on Friday that the tropical storm, which was about to reach Cuba, was now classified as a Category 1 hurricane, with its winds reaching a speed of 120 kilometers an hour. The Cuban government already issued a hurricane warning for the nation’s western provinces.
Further forecasts said that Ida could turn into a major Category 3 hurricane with winds of up to 193 kilometers an hour when it reaches the US coast. “The forecast track has it headed straight towards New Orleans. Not good,” said Jim Kossin, a senior scientist with the Climate Service.
Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards declared a state of emergency for the state on Thursday in anticipation of the weather system making landfall this weekend.
“Unfortunately, all of Louisiana’s coastline is currently in the forecast cone,” Edwards said, adding that “by Saturday evening, everyone should be in the location where they intend to ride out the storm.”
Hurricane Ida could very well strike New Orleans on the same date that the devastating Hurricane Katrina hit 16 years ago – August 29.
Back in 2005, Katrina claimed some 1,800 lives as it raged through an area stretching from the central Louisiana coast to around the Mississippi-Alabama state line. It also caused catastrophic flooding in New Orleans, with some 80% of the city under water.