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A fire is seen as flood waters inundate downtown Tarpon Springs, Florida after Hurricane Idalia passes offshore. Photo: AFP

Hurricane Idalia slams ashore in Florida with ‘extremely dangerous’ category 3 winds

  • Surges of up to 4.9 metres are anticipated as destructive winds and torrential downpours batter hundreds of miles of shoreline
  • ‘Winds gusting. Terrible power outages all over. Debris flying everywhere’, said an official as Idalia ripped through one county

Hurricane Idalia made landfall in Florida as an “extremely dangerous” Category 3 storm on Wednesday after millions of residents evacuated or hunkered down in homes and shelters in anticipation of a life-threatening storm surge.

Drawing strength from the Gulf of Mexico’s warm waters, Idalia unleashed destructive winds and torrential downpours that were forecast to cause coastal flooding up to 4.9 metres deep along the state’s Gulf coast.

Idalia came ashore at 7.45am EDT at Keaton Beach, an oceanfront community of 13,000 people in Taylor County, about 121km southeast of Tallahassee, the state capital. The town lies in the centre of the Big Bend region, where the state’s northern panhandle curves into the Florida Peninsula.

“It’s just ripping through Taylor County now. Hope all is safe”, County Commissioner Jamie English said. “Winds gusting. Terrible power outages all over. Debris flying everywhere”.

Video footage from Keaton Beach posted on social media platform X by storm chaser Sidney Grimmett showed heavy downpours and trees whipping in the wind as an electrical line sparked along the side of a roadway.

Overnight, Idalia attained “an extremely dangerous Category 4 intensity” on the five-step Saffir-Simpson wind scale on its way to landfall in Florida on Wednesday morning, the National Hurricane Centre (NHC) in Miami said.

But by 7am EDT it weakened slightly, slipping into Category 3, with maximum sustained winds of 201km. Any storm reaching Category 3 or higher is considered a major hurricane.

Sparsely populated compared with the Tampa-St Petersburg area to the south, the Big Bend features a marshy coast, threaded with freshwater springs and rivers, and a cluster of small offshore islands forming Cedar Key, a historic fishing village demolished in 1896 by a hurricane’s storm surge.

Early on Wednesday morning, storm winds were knocking bent palm tree tops against Ken Wood’s house in Dunedin, near Tampa and 298km south of landfall.

Wood, 57, a bridge tender in Pinellas County, did not heed evacuation orders even after he shut down the bridge between on the Dunedin Causeway on Tuesday, saying he figured he was on high enough ground.

“Mainly it’s a lot of loud wind and rain right now, some thunder”, he said by telephone, adding that roads were flooded. “The sky is dark”.

A boardwalk at the Clearwater Harbour Marina in Florida flooded by the rising tide after Hurricane Idalia made landfall. Photo: AFP

Most of Florida’s 21 million residents, and many in the adjacent states of Georgia and South Carolina, were under hurricane warnings and other storm-related advisories. State emergency declarations were issued in all three.

Florida’s Gulf coast, southeastern Georgia and eastern parts of North and South Carolina could face 10cm to 20cm of rain through Thursday, with isolated areas seeing as much as 30cm, the hurricane centre warned.

Officials said the storm’s most dangerous feature would be a powerful surge of wind-driven surf that is expected to flood barrier islands and other low-lying areas along the coast.

Surge warnings were posted for hundreds of miles of shoreline, from Sarasota to the sport fishing haven of Indian Pass at the Western end of Apalachicola Bay. In some areas, the surge could rise as high as 4.9 metres, the NHC said.

“If you end up with a storm surge that even approaches 16 feet, the chances of surviving that are not great”, DeSantis said. “You would need to be in a three-story building because it is going to rise very, very high”.

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At the White House on Tuesday, US President Joe Biden said he and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who is seeking the Republican nomination to challenge Biden in the 2024 presidential election, were “in constant contact” about storm preparations.

Biden was set to speak about the government’s hurricane response efforts later on Wednesday.

Idalia grew from a tropical storm into a hurricane early on Tuesday, a day after passing west of Cuba, where it damaged homes, knocked out power, flooded villages and prompted mass evacuations.

Hurricane Idalia making landfall in Florida causes “catastrophic storm surge and damaging winds” Photo: AFP

It was the fourth major hurricane to strike Florida in the past seven years, following Irma in 2017, Michael in 2018 and Ian, which peaked at Category 5, last September.

More than 40 school districts in Florida cancelled classes, DeSantis said, and Tampa International Airport suspended commercial operations on Tuesday.

About 5,500 National Guard members were mobilised, while 30,000 to 40,000 electricity workers were on standby. The state has set aside 1.1 million of petrol to address interruptions to fuel supplies, the governor said.

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