Hurricane Katrina is now a category five hurricane. This could be catastrophic. The path right now is projected to hit New Orleans, which is like a bowl. New Orleans could be covered in up to 30 feet of water.
Mandatory evacacuations of New Orleans are in place.
Also, this will also raise gas prices for the rest of the US, considering there is a lot of oil refineries and barges in the Gulf of Mexico.
Latest article-
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NEW ORLEANS - Mayor Ray Nagin ordered an immediate mandatory evacuation Sunday for all of New Orleans, a city sitting below sea level with 485,000 inhabitants, as Hurricane Katrina bore down with wind revved up to nearly 175 mph and a threat of a massive storm surge.
President Bush followed suit, urging people living in the path of the hurricane to take the storm extremely seriously and follow orders to evacuate to higher ground.
Acknowledging that large numbers of people, many of them stranded tourists, would be unable to leave, the city set up 10 places of last resort including the Superdome arena.
“This is a once-in-a-lifetime event,” Nagin said. “The city of New Orleans has never seen a hurricane of this magnitude hit it directly.”
Levees may be compromised
The mayor called the order unprecedented, but said Katrina’s storm surge would likely top the levees that protect the city from the surrounding water of Lake Pontchartrain, the Mississippi River and marshes. The bowl-shaped city must pump water out even during normal times, and the hurricane threatened pump power.
“We are facing a storm that most of us have long feared,” Nagin said.
“We will do everything in our power to help the people in the communities affected by this storm,” Bush said as the hurricane bore down. “We cannot stress enough the danger this hurricane poses to Gulf Coast communities,” Bush told reporters on his ranch in central Texas.
“I urge all citizens to put their own safety and the safety of their families first by moving to safe ground,” Bush said.
Governor: I-10 stop and go
Gov. Kathleen Blanco said Interstate 10, which was converted Saturday so that all lanes headed one-way out of town, was totally gridlocked.
At 11 a.m. EDT, the National Hurricane Center said Katrina’s maximum sustained wind speed had stepped up to nearly 175 mph, with higher gusts. The hurricane’s eye was about 225 miles south-southeast of the mouth of Mississippi River.
The storm was moving toward the west-northwest at nearly 12 mph and was expected to turn toward the north-northwest, the hurricane center said.
Nagin said people who opted to go to the Superdome should come with enough food and supplies to last three to five days. He said police and firefighters would fan out throughout the city telling residents to get out. He also said police would have the authority to commander any vehicle or building that could be used for evacuation or shelter.
A hurricane warning was in effect for the north-central Gulf Coast from Morgan City, La., to the Alabama-Florida line, meaning hurricane conditions were expected within 24 hours, the hurricane center said. Tropical storm warnings extended east to Indian Pass, Fla., and west to Cameron, La.
Katrina had been blamed for nine deaths in South Florida.
Storm-surge flood threat
The storm had the potential for storm surge flooding of up to 25 feet, topped with even higher waves, as much as 15 inches of rain, and tornadoes, the National Hurricane Center said.
Only three Category 5 hurricanes — the highest on the Saffir-Simpson scale — have hit the United States since record-keeping began. The last was 1992’s Hurricane Andrew, which leveled parts of South Florida, killed 43 people and caused $31 billion in damage.
The other two were the 1935 Labor Day hurricane that hit the Florida Keys and killed 600 people and Hurricane Camille, which devastated the Mississippi coast in 1969, killing 256.
Mississippi landfall possible
The hurricane’s landfall could still come in Mississippi and affect Alabama and Florida, but it looked likely to come ashore Monday morning on the southeastern Louisiana coast, said Ed Rappaport, deputy director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami. That put New Orleans squarely in the crosshairs.
“If it came ashore with the intensity it has now and went to the New Orleans area, it would be the strongest we’ve had in recorded history there,” Rappaport said in a telephone interview Sunday morning. “We’re hoping of course there’ll be a slight tapering off at least of the winds, but we can’t plan on that. So whichever area gets hit, this is going to be a once in a lifetime event for them.”
He said loss of life was “what inevitably occurs” with a storm this strong.
“We’re in for some trouble here, no matter what,” he said.
This is going to be bad.