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Hurricane Ike takes aim at Texas coast, Houston
12 Sep 2008 03:07:48 GMT
Source: Reuters
* Hurricane Ike remains Category 2 storm

* Ike seen hitting Texas, west of main Gulf oil fields

* Storm surge of 20 feet possible at landfall

By Tim Gaynor

GALVESTON, Texas, Sept 11 (Reuters) - Hundreds of thousands of people fled coastal areas in the path of Hurricane Ike on Thursday as the storm gathered strength on a collision course with the Texas Gulf Coast, threatening to swamp populous areas around Houston under a massive wave of water.

Ike was a Category 2 storm with 100-mph (160-kph) winds and likely will come ashore late on Friday or early on Saturday as a potentially dangerous Category 3 storm on the five-step intensity scale with winds of more than 111 mph (178 kph), the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

The storm menaced Houston, the fourth-most populous U.S. city and hub of the oil industry. Many remembered the chaotic highway evacuation of 2 million residents during Hurricane Rita in 2005, which ended up sparing the city.

Although the city could see hurricane-force winds, officials called for most residents to "shelter in place." "They are in a safer, better position if they stay where they are," Houston Mayor Bill White said.

Because of Ike's wide scope -- it is larger geographically than Hurricane Katrina was in 2005 -- it could bring a storm surge of up to 20 feet (6 metres), normally associated with larger storms.

Ike "poses a significant storm surge hazard," the hurricane center said in its 11 p.m. EDT (0300 GMT Friday) advisory.

The storm arrives just 10 days after Hurricane Gustav forced 2 million people to flee the Louisiana coast and threatened a New Orleans still reeling from Katrina's devastation.

"The most important message I can send is, do not take this storm lightly," U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said in Washington. "This is not a storm to gamble with."

OIL PLATFORMS SPARED

With the storm's track taking it away from the bulk of 4,000 offshore platforms that produce about a quarter of U.S. oil supply, U.S. crude oil futures dipped as low as $100.10 a barrel, the lowest level since early April.

Residents of Galveston -- an island city of 280,000 about 50 miles (80 km) south of Houston -- were ordered to evacuate, along with other low-lying counties. Some 600,000 people had left, the state said.

"We're getting up out of here," said Nykera Allen, a student who was loading up her car to drive to San Antonio in central Texas. "They're going to shut the lights and the water off and that's not a good situation."

The hurricane's current track would see it hit the Texas coast near Freeport in Brazoria County, just south of Galveston. It could be the worst storm to hit the Texas coast since Hurricane Carla came ashore near Corpus Christi in 1961.

The coastal areas under threat from Ike are lined with oil refineries that process about 25 percent of the nation's fuel. Some stretches boast resorts and million-dollar beachfront homes.

'A SURGE TSUNAMI'

New Orleans, where Katrina's storm surge flattened levees and flooded 80 percent of the city, appeared to be out of Ike's path, but is still under a tropical storm warning.

President George W. Bush declared an emergency exists in Louisiana due to the storm, ordering federal aid to help disaster relief in the state, the White House said.

While New Orleans is below sea level, downtown Houston is about 50 feet (15 metres) above sea level, but the city's flat, expansive terrain still leaves it vulnerable to flooding.

One Texas official likened the potential wall of water to a tidal wave, not just a storm surge.

"This is a surge tsunami," said Jack Colley, of the state emergency management team. "This is not rising water."

In its latest advisory, the hurricane center said Ike was 445 miles (715 km) east-southeast of Corpus Christi and about 340 miles (545 km) southeast of Galveston. It was moving west-northwest at 12 mph (19 kph).

In Galveston -- site of a 1900 hurricane that was the deadliest weather disaster in U.S. history -- lines of cars, buses and trucks crowded onto a bridge to leave the island. Others without transportation waited for buses to carry them to shelters.

As always, hold-outs hunkered down to weather the storm.

"I'm just going to batten down and not worry about it," said Keith Andrews, a shipyard worker. "If the Lord wants you, he's going to take you anyway." (Additional reporting by Anna Driver in Houston and Jim Forsyth in San Antonio; writing by Chris Baltimore; Editing by Mary Milliken and Peter Cooney)


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Residents buy plywood for protection against Hurricane Ike in Houston, Texas September 11, 2008. Hundreds of thousands of people fled coastal areas in the path of Hurricane Ike on Thursday as ...



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