New Orleans threatened by floods

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Debris is strewn across a parking lot in New Orleans after flash floods struck the area early on July 10. Photo: AFP

WASHINGTON: The US city of New Orleans prepared Wednesday to face the first tropical storm of the season, which could become a hurricane and led the governor of Louisiana to declare a state of emergency.

“It is still too soon to tell what the impact will be, but we believe there will be an impact,” New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell said at a press conference in the city which was devastated by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

“Be prepared for the impacts,” she warned, reminding residents that the city had already received up to eight inches of rain in three hours that morning.

Debris is strewn across a parking lot in New Orleans after flash floods struck the area early on July 10. Photo: AFP

There was partial flooding.
New Orleans was placed under a storm-surge watch Wednesday morning along with a stretch of Louisiana coast as a tropical storm formed in the Gulf of Mexico, threatening the region with potentially life-threatening rains.

The storm-surge watches warn residents of possible flooding from rising waters and coastal inundations in the city, known worldwide for its Mardi Gras and jazz.

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Part of New Orleans is built below sea level.
“Conditions appear favourable for this system to strengthen to a hurricane as it approaches the central Gulf Coast by the weekend,” the Miami-based National Hurricane Center said.

If the storm becomes a hurricane as anticipated, it would be the first of the Atlantic season and would be named Barry.
Parts of the south-eastern Louisiana coast were already experiencing heavy rains and flooding, the NHC said.

Jefferson Parish, which includes parts of New Orleans, was drenched in 10-15cm of rain and two to three more inches were expected.

Louisiana governor John Bel Edwards declared the state of emergency, which allows the state to provide additional resources for storm preparation.

Residents in the risk zone are currently encouraged to stay home and “shelter in place”.
Wednesday morning nearly 10,000 inhabitants lost electricity in New Orleans.

During Hurricane Katrina levees collapsed under the weight of the water, flooding 80 percent of the city. More than 1,800 people died during the catastrophe.

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At 2100 GMT Wednesday the storm system was 200km south-east of the mouth of the Mississippi River.
The storm packed sustained winds of 65km per hour, still way below hurricane force of 74 miles per hour but on track to become a tropical storm by yesterday and a hurricane by today.

It was expected to unload as much as a foot of rain over the Gulf coast through early next week, forecasters said.
Local authorities also issued warnings to residents as the Mississippi River neared flood levels, rising to 4.9 metres in New Orleans as of 1300 GMT.

The city’s airport reported numerous flight delays, but it “will stay open unless conditions become unsafe or infrastructure is damaged,” an airport spokesman said during the press conference. – AFP

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