Hurricane Milton strengthens back into category 5 storm
The National Hurricane Center is reporting that Milton has strengthened back into a category 5 hurricane.
Miltonâs maximum sustained winds were up to 165mph, the agency said Tuesday afternoon. It will likely fluctuate in intensity, but will continue to be a âdangerous major hurricaneâ when it makes landfall in Florida Wednesday evening.
âThis is a very serious situation and residents in Florida should closely follow orders from their local emergency management officials,â the National Hurricane Center said. âEvacuations and other preparations should be completed today. Milton has the potential to be one of the most destructive hurricanes on record for west-central Florida.â
Key events
As Hurricane Milton barrels toward Tampa, staff at the cityâs zoo and aquarium are taking preparations to ride out the storm with animals that canât be relocated.
Many animals have already been transported out of town, but about a dozen zoo and eight aquarium staff are expected to stay in Tampa to care for those that havenât, the Washington Post reports. That includes animals too large to transport, like elephants and giraffes, which staff are relocating to a hurricane-proof barn with enough food and water to survive for a few days in case the building isnât immediately accessible.
New footage from the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere at Colorado State University captures the eye of Hurricane Milton.
More videos of the hurricane, including a lightning show at the center of the storm, are available on the instituteâs website.
As Floridians in the path of incoming Hurricane Milton rush to evacuate, gas stations across the state are running out of fuel. As of 6:30pm ET, Reuters reports, 17.4% of the stateâs gas stations had run dry.
Demand for gasoline had jumped, said Patrick De Haan, an analyst at GasBuddy, a fuel markets tracker: âThese numbers will continue to rise very fast.â
Florida is the third-largest gasoline consumer in the US, but there are no refineries in the state, making it dependent on waterborne imports. More than 17m tons of petroleum- and natural gas-related products move through Tampa Bay in a typical year, according to the Energy Information Administration.
More on those fuel import pauses from Reuters:
Kinder Morgan (KMI.N) has shut its Central Florida Pipeline system, which moves refined products between Tampa and Orlando, the company said in an emailed statement. It has closed all fuel delivery terminals in Tampa, but expects trucks to be able to pick up fuel from Orlando wholesale racks until winds exceed 35 miles per hour.
Fuel trucks cannot safely deliver at wind speeds exceeding that threshold, wholesale distributor Mansfield explained, and said it expects wind conditions to bring all Florida fuel deliveries to a near-halt by Wednesday.
Refiner CITGO Petroleum and infrastructure and logistics provider Buckeye Partners are also shutting down their Tampa terminals, the companies told Reuters.
Mansfield has moved all Florida markets to its âCode Redâ classification, requiring a 72-hour notice to make new deliveries.
It is also requesting 48-hour notices for new deliveries in southern Georgia.
Milton could potentially be the biggest disruptor to Floridaâs gasoline supply since Hurricane Andrew in 1992, said Tom Kloza, head of energy analysis at Oil Price Information Service.
âIâd be hard pressed to come up with an area that could be more prone to lingering problems should a Cat3 or greater storm hit the infrastructure,â Kloza said. âItâs hard to anticipate any tankers or barges coming in to Tampa Bay until Sunday or Monday,â he added.
In an attempt to reach more Americans and counter rampant disinformation, the White House is launching a Reddit account to share updates on Hurricanes Helene and Milton, Scripps News reports.
Launched in 2005, Reddit is a forum-style social media platform conducive to Q&As.
Still grappling with the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, hospitals and healthcare facilities on Floridaâs Gulf coast are now preparing for Milton to make landfall.
The state is currently seeing its âlargest evacuation everâ, said Steve McCoy, the chief of the Florida department of healthâs bureau of emergency medical oversight.
Ten hospitals have reported evacuations as of Tuesday afternoon, the Associated Press reported, and 300 healthcare facilities have evacuated, including 63 nursing homes and 169 assisted living facilities.
âIâve lived on the Gulf coast my entire life and in Sarasota for 20 years. Iâve never seen anything like this,â said David Verinder, CEO of Sarasota Memorial health care system. âOur anxieties are high, but weâre as prepared as we know how to be.â
More from the AP:
Health officials are using almost 600 vehicles to take patients out of the stormâs path, tracking them with blue wristbands that show where they were evacuated from and where they are being sent. They plan to keep getting patients out through the night, until winds reach sustained speeds of 40 mph and driving conditions become unsafe.
Tampa General Hospital has stocked up on more than five days of supplies, including food, linens and 5,000 gallons of water, in addition to an on-site well. In the event of a power disruption, the hospital also has an energy plant with generators and boilers located 33 feet above sea level.
Tampa General deployed an âaquafenceâ to successfully prevent storm-surge flooding during Hurricane Helene two weeks ago. The barrier will be up again when Milton makes landfall and can withstand a storm surge of 15 feet. The U.S. National Hurricane Center estimates Miltonâs surges will be 10 to 15 feet high at their peak.
Hurricane Milton is bringing business and tourism to a halt in large swaths of Florida as the state readies itself for a storm officials have warned will be âextremely dangerousâ and potentially among the most destructive on record in the area.
Orlando international, one of Americaâs busiest airports, said it would cease operations Wednesday morning while Tampa international closed on Tuesday, Reuters reported. Universal Studios and Disney World said its theme parks would close Wednesday afternoon. Retailer Target said it would temporarily close or adjust hours at some locations.
Waffle House, which famously often stays open during extreme weather, announced that it would close multiple locations in south-west Florida.
A team of âhurricane huntersâ from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) flew through Milton as the category 5 hurricane barrelled towards Floridaâs coast.
The team shared footage of their bumpy ride into the storm to gather data that will provide information for forecasting and hurricane research.
Milton is expected to be one of the worst hurricanes to hit the US in decades. Joe Biden warned that evacuation orders for those in the stormâs path were a matter of âlife and deathâ while the Tampa mayor told residents: âIf you choose to stay ⦠you are going to die.â
Hurricane Milton strengthens back into category 5 storm
The National Hurricane Center is reporting that Milton has strengthened back into a category 5 hurricane.
Miltonâs maximum sustained winds were up to 165mph, the agency said Tuesday afternoon. It will likely fluctuate in intensity, but will continue to be a âdangerous major hurricaneâ when it makes landfall in Florida Wednesday evening.
âThis is a very serious situation and residents in Florida should closely follow orders from their local emergency management officials,â the National Hurricane Center said. âEvacuations and other preparations should be completed today. Milton has the potential to be one of the most destructive hurricanes on record for west-central Florida.â
Fema has stationed major resources in Florida to support the state before Hurricane Milton makes landfall, the agency said in a statement on Tuesday.
The agency has dispatched dozens of teams overseeing incident management, search and rescue, swift water rescue, disaster medical assistance and temporary power along with 300 ambulances and 30 âhigh water vehiclesâ from the defense department. More than 20m meals and 40m liters of water are available as needed, Fema said.
âThe National Hurricane Center forecasts Hurricane Milton will be a large and extremely dangerous hurricane when it approaches the west coast of Florida tomorrow, bringing devastating hurricane-force winds and life-threatening [storm] surge,â the statement read. The agency also warned âtime is running out to prepare for the hurricaneâs potentially deadly impactsâ.
The announcement comes as the Biden administration grapples with the effects of back-to-back hurricanes as well as misinformation spread by Donald Trump and his supporters and others about the federal response to recent storms and false claims that Fema is preventing people from evacuating in Florida.
Large number of gas stations in Florida out of fuel amid mass evacuation
As Florida residents prepare to flee Hurricane Milton, which is expected to be one of the stateâs strongest storms in a century, gas stations are running out of fuel.
About 1,300 of the stateâs 7,500 gas stations, or 17.4%, were out of gas on Tuesday afternoon, CNN reported, citing data from GasBuddy. In areas under evacuation orders, the shortages were even more dire: on Monday night, 70% of stations in Fort Myers were without gas.
âThese numbers will continue to rise very fast,â Patrick De Haan, an analyst at GasBuddy, told Reuters.
The stateâs governor said that officials are working with fuel companies to continue bringing in gasoline before Milton makes landfall on Wednesday.
âWe have been dispatching fuel over the past 24 hours as gas stations have run out,â the stateâs governor, Ron DeSantis, said. âSo we currently have 268,000 gallons of diesel, 110,000 gallons of gasoline. Those numbers are less than what they were 24 hours ago because weâve put a lot in, but we have an additional 1.2m gallons of both diesel and gasoline that is currently en route to the state of Florida.â
Meanwhile, the supreme courtâs latest term is under way, and the nine justices heard oral arguments today in a case challenging the Biden administrationâs regulation of âghost gunsâ. As the Guardianâs Cecilia Nowell reports, the conservative-dominated body seemed ready to take the governmentâs side. Hereâs more:
The US supreme court signalled a willingness to uphold the regulation of âghost gunsâ â firearms without serial numbers that are built from kits that people can order online and assemble at home.
The manufacturers and gun rights groups challenging the rule argued the Biden administration overstepped by trying to regulate kits.
Justice Samuel Alito compared gun parts to meal ingredients, saying a lineup including eggs and peppers isnât necessarily a western omelet. Justice Amy Coney Barrett, though, questioned whether gun kits are more like ready-to-eat meal kits that contain everything needed to make a dinner like turkey chili.
Chief Justice John Roberts seemed skeptical of the challengersâ position that the kits are mostly popular with hobbyists who enjoy making their own weapons, like auto enthusiasts might rebuild a car on the weekend.
Many ghost gun kits require only the drilling of a few holes and removal of plastic tabs.
âMy understanding is that itâs not terribly difficult to do this,â Roberts said. âHe really wouldnât think he has built that gun, would he?â
A ruling is expected in the coming months.
Ron DeSantis, Floridaâs governor, says he expects Hurricane Milton to reach the stateâs west coast by tomorrow night or early on Thursday morning.
He also says his administration has taken steps to help people flee areas under evacuation warnings, including negotiating lower hotel prices and arranging free rides with Uber:
From his perch on the International Space Station, Nasa astronaut Matthew Dominick got a view of Hurricane Milton as it churned across the Gulf of Mexico towards Floridaâs west coast:
Biden says his team is doing everything ‘to save lives and help communities’
Speaking in Milwaukee at an event to promote his efforts to rid the US of lead pipes, Joe Biden repeated that his administration was prepared for Hurricane Milton, and that Floridians should heed the warnings of authorities.
âWeâre prepared for another horrible hurricane to hit Florida. I directed my team to do everything they can to save lives and help communities, before, during and after this hurricane. The most important message today for all those who may be listening to this and the impacted areas: listen to the local authorities. Follow safety instruction, including evacuation orders,â Biden said.