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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Robin Webb

Tropical storm warning issued from Louisiana to Florida panhandle as Gulf system quickly develops

Tropical storm warnings have been posted for the U.S. coast from Louisiana to the Florida panhandle as a weather system in the central Gulf of Mexico strengthened and marched north, according to the National Hurricane Center. By Thursday night or Friday, the system could become Tropical Storm Claudette.

Forecasters expect the storm to make landfall in the early morning hours of Saturday and produce heavy rain and strong winds along a wide area of the coast

The tropical storm warning is in effect from Intracoastal City, Louisiana, to the Alabama-Florida border, including Lake Pontchartrain, Lake Maurepas and metropolitan New Orleans.

At 5 p.m. Thursday, the hurricane center said the system had maximum sustained winds of 30 mph and was located 475 miles south of Morgan City, Louisiana, and was moving north at 9 mph.

The depression is expected to develop over the west-central Gulf late Thursday or early Friday from a large trough of low pressure moving north toward the U.S.

There is still potential for the depression to strengthen into Tropical Storm Claudette this weekend, according to AccuWeather.

“Wind shear is likely to be a constant negative impact on development as the system tries to move northward,” said AccuWeather Hurricane Expert Dan Kottlowski.

The heaviest rainfall, possibly as much as 12 inches, is expected in southern and eastern Louisiana, southern Mississippi, southwestern Alabama and the western part of the Florida Panhandle. Rainfall of 2-8 inches is expected from the Texas-Louisiana border to the eastern Florida Panhandle, forecasters said.

AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Rob Miller said landfall could happen late Friday or Saturday anywhere from the Texas-Louisiana border to the western part of the Florida Panhandle, but odds are it will come ashore in coastal Louisiana.

“The storm, regardless of strength, has the potential to deliver rainfall rates of 1-2 inches per hour over a several-hour period,” Miller said.

The system has a 90% chance of formation in the next two days, according to the 2 p.m. advisory from the hurricane center.

After Claudette, the next named storm to form would be Danny.

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