Hurricane Matthew's potentially catastrophic strike on Haiti is
imminent, and it will also impact parts of Jamaica, eastern Cuba and the
Bahamas. Late this week and into the weekend, portions of the
coastal southeastern U.S. states could see impacts from Matthew.
Interests from Florida to the coastal Carolinas should monitor the
progress of Matthew very closely.
The National Hurricane Center (NHC)
said in its 5 p.m. advisory Monday, "While there remains significant
uncertainty in the track of Matthew in the long range, the threat to
Florida and the southeastern U.S. coast has increased."
U.S. Threat?
Beyond that, it remains
uncertain how close Matthew's eyewall will pass near the northwest
Bahamas later Thursday into Friday, and it is still too soon to
determine how big the danger will be in parts of the U.S. late this week
and next weekend. (
MORE: Why Long-Range Model Forecasts For the Tropics Can't Often Be Trusted) For
now, ensemble forecast guidance suggests we can't rule out at least
tropical storm-force winds along the eastern Florida coast in the
Thursday-Friday timeframe.
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