MIAMI, (Reuters) – Tropical Storm Katia strengthened into a hurricane over the Atlantic yesterday, while another mass of thunderstorms that could become a named storm this week triggered evacuations of some oil workers from the Gulf of Mexico.
Katia had sustained winds of 75 miles per hour (120 kph) and was the second hurricane of the June-through-November Atlantic hurricane season, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.
The Miami-based center said Katia was forecast to become a “major” hurricane with winds over 111 mph (178 kph) by the weekend but it was too early to tell whether it would threaten land.
At 11 p.m. Katia was about 1,165 miles (1,875 km) east of the Caribbean’s Leeward Islands. It was moving rapidly west-northwest and was forecast to turn northwest in a couple of days on a course that would keep it away from the Caribbean islands.
Hurricane Irene rampaged up the U.S. East Coast over the weekend and authorities on the U.S. Atlantic seaboard are keeping an eye on Katia to see which path it takes.
Long-range computer models, which can be off by hundreds of miles, show Katia nearing the mid-Atlantic island of Bermuda in about a week. Several models turned it north, away from the U.S. East Coast.
The Atlantic hurricane season typically brings 11 or 12 named storms. Katia is already the 11th, and with half of the season still ahead, it is shaping up to be the unusually busy year that was predicted.
Energy companies with oil and natural gas operations in the Gulf of Mexico were keeping watch on a mass of thunderstorms over the northwest Caribbean Sea and eastern Gulf.
In an advisory issued late yesterday, the hurricane center said the disturbed weather system had a “high” chance of developing into a tropical cyclone in the next two days.