Katia ramps up power, but seen missing US East Coast

MIAMI, (Reuters) – Hurricane Katia powered up to a  major Category 3 storm yesterday, but was expected to veer away  from the U.S. East Coast later this week, avoiding a direct hit  on a seaboard already battered by earlier Hurricane Irene.
The U.S. National Hurricane Center warned however that U.S.  East Coast beaches should still watch out in the coming week  for large swells generated by Katia which could cause  life-threatening coastal surf and rip currents.
By late this afternoon, Katia’s winds had strengthened to  115 miles per hour (185 kph), making it a Category 3 hurricane  on the five-step Saffir-Simpson intensity scale as it tracked  northwestward on a path over the ocean between Bermuda and the  Caribbean, the Miami-based center said.
It said additional intensification was forecast through  Tuesday followed by little predicted change on Wednesday.
NHC hurricane specialist Robbie Berg told Reuters the  greatest threat from Katia for the U.S. eastern seaboard was  likely to be the large swells, and resulting dangerous coastal  surf and currents, she generated on her path.
“Even though these storms may stay offshore, they still can  be a deadly threat, especially to people going to the beach,”  Berg said. “It may be a beautiful nice day out and you may just  not know that there are rip currents there that can pull you  out to sea,” he added.
Forecasters and residents of the U.S. Atlantic seaboard  have been keeping an anxious eye on Katia after Hurricane Irene  raked up the East Coast from the Carolinas to Maine last  weekend. It killed at least 40 people and caused extensive  flooding, especially in New Jersey and Vermont.
Katia, the second hurricane of the June-through-November  Atlantic season, has kept forecasters guessing for days about  its potential threat to the United States.
Berg said the latest five-day forecast predicted the  hurricane would swing north and then northeastward from  Thursday in between Bermuda and the U.S. mainland, pushed away  from the East Coast by a developing low pressure trough.
ANOTHER TROPICAL WAVE MOVING WESTWARD
This would guide the storm around a ridge of high pressure  in the central Atlantic known as the Bermuda High.
“The steering flow right now is pushing the storm to the  northwest but once it gets closer to the East Coast, it’ll  start feeling the effects of that trough a little bit more, and  it’s going to make that sharp turn around the Bermuda High and  head out northeastward over the open Atlantic,” Berg said.
At 5 p.m. (2100 GMT), Katia’s center was located about 495  miles (795 km) south of Bermuda, the mid-Atlantic British  overseas territory that despite its small size is a global  reinsurance hub.
Berg said there was still a one in 10 chance parts of the  East Coast could experience tropical storm-force winds when  Katia passed well offshore later this week, especially jutting  coastal areas like North Carolina’s Outer Banks and Cape Cod in  Massachusetts. Bermuda could also experience such winds.
Elsewhere, Tropical Storm Lee tested New Orleans’ flood  defenses over the weekend, and on Monday its weakened remnants  threatened to dump heavy rain on states from Texas to Florida.
The Sept. 10 peak of the annual Atlantic hurricane season  was approaching, and hurricane spotters were already watching  another tropical wave, located southwest of the Cape Verde  Islands off Africa.
This was moving westward and the NHC gave it a “high”  chance of becoming a tropical cyclone in the next 48 hours.
Forecasters have predicted a very active 2011 Atlantic  season with between eight and 10 hurricanes, above the  long-term June to November average of six to seven hurricanes.