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Katrina

Slingblade61

Well-Known Member
Supporting Member
Aug 26, 2004
6,046
129
Jesus........

[font=Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif]Katrina remains a wicked category 5 hurricane. Sustained winds Sunday reached 175 mph and gusts were reported as high as 215 mph. The storm will punish the central Gulf Coast Sunday night and Monday and will be the worst in this region since Camille hit in 1969. The storm will produce catastrophic damage from eastern Louisiana to southwestern Alabama. It is also a serious threat to the lives of those who are staying behind to weather the storm. The worst part of the eye wall is approximately 25 miles in diameter. Where it crosses the coast, it will look like a war zone. The coastline will be completely inundated by a 10 to 20 foot storm surge and winds are likely to top 140 mph. All structures not built to withstand the fury of a major hurricane will be destroyed. Trees will be uprooted and power lines will come down. The storm will have huge financial impact. Damage caused by Katrina will be in the billions, and the evacuation of oil rigs in the Gulf will have at least some effect on the price of gasoline.

Katrina will be a catastrophic hurricane. The worst of the storm will occur from southeast Louisiana to the Alabama coast. The area of highest concern is from New Orleans to Biloxi, Mississippi. Somewhere in that zone, the storm will make landfall Monday morning either as a category 5 hurricane or a strong category 4. When Camille roared in in 1969 it produced a devastating storm surge over 20 feet high. Katrina very well could produce something similar. The city of New Orleans remains in harm's way. The force of Katrina's winds will act like a bulldozer and shove huge amounts of water toward Lake Pontchartrain. This could cause water to overtop the levees, and the city would be flooded. Since much of New Orleans is below sea level there is no place for the excess to go. That means the water would remain for weeks until the city is pumped dry. This is a very serious situation for the entire central Gulf Coast. For more on the storm please go to the AccuWeather.com Hurricane Center on our home page.



You southern boys stay safe, ya hear?
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Kilted Arab

Well-Known Member
Apr 30, 2005
1,202
4
Just been reading about this from an economic perspective...

"Hurricane Katrina is a very real threat to lives and economic
interests. Do not ignore this story. It will unfold as Asian markets are open
and as most American sleeps. Broad flooding and transport disruption is
expected. 70% of New Orleans is below sea level with the highest levels at 18ft, but storm surge expected to reach upto 28ft.


Why is Louisiana so important?
-2nd largest petroleum refinery in the US
-1/2 US annual grain exports
-26% of US seafood industry
-large tourism industry including floating casinos
-11% of US petroleum reserves and 19% of gas reserves
-New Orleans is the 32nd largest city in America
-4 of America's 11 largest ports --> SHIPS


OIL/Natural Gas - remember this name "Fourchon" it's the terminal and pipeline
that carries 1/6th of America's energy supply. This is directly in the path of
Katrina right now. Oil folks think it must be closed.
Crude futures currently +3.5% @ 69.70"



As Sling said...take care..

 

Silver

I don't have a handicap.
Dec 5, 2004
1,863
1
I was thinking when I posted that if anyone that didn't know the song would get offended.

I presume not, but we'll see.
 

DaveE

The golfer fka ST Champ
Aug 31, 2004
3,986
3
Silver said:
I was thinking when I posted that if anyone that didn't know the song would get offended.

I presume not, but we'll see.

Speaking of insensitive. As I was watching the news this morning I kept remembering my last trip to New Orleans and thinking that it needed a good bath.

Tacky I know, but it's like getting the giggles at a funeral. You know it's wrong but you just can't stop.
 

Rockford35

Shark skin shoes
Staff member
Admin
Aug 30, 2004
21,801
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Canada
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Man, I had no idea that New Orleans was such an important hub to the american economy.

1/4 of the nations oil and gas reserves go through there....plus offshore oil industry....reports of 2 oil platforms knocked loose by the storm and floating away...

I smell gas prices going up for everyone. Well, more than they were going up had this not happened.

Crazy.

And who builds a city that's 80% below sea level?

R35
 

DaveE

The golfer fka ST Champ
Aug 31, 2004
3,986
3
This storm is huge. Looks like the heavy rain is getting close to Bravo's. Any word from him today?
 

Rockford35

Shark skin shoes
Staff member
Admin
Aug 30, 2004
21,801
1,083
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Not as of yet, I don't think. Ever since it took that shift to the east avoiding NO, i've been wondering how much wet stuff he's gonna get. :confused:

The rain looks to be coming bigtime into his neck of the woods as we speak...

http://www.srh.noaa.gov/ifps/MapClick.php?MapType=3&site=bmx&CiTemplate=1&map.x=166&map.y=121

R35
Birm.gif
 

longiron

Well-Known Member
May 2, 2005
332
1
Rockford35 said:
1/4 of the nations oil and gas reserves go through there....plus offshore oil industry....reports of 2 oil platforms knocked loose by the storm and floating away...


R35
Just saw on the news where one that broke lose hit a birdge and took it out.
 

Kilted Arab

Well-Known Member
Apr 30, 2005
1,202
4
Rockford35 said:
Crazy.

And who builds a city that's 80% below sea level?

R35

You know, I was thinking the very same thing y/day.

Why do it? Why not move inland instead of reclaiming a swamp?

Like the Dutch as well. "Oh...can't be bothered walking inland a bit, let's live on the seabed...that' seems like a good idea".

There must have been a good reason for it, I guess....
 

longiron

Well-Known Member
May 2, 2005
332
1
I asked the same thing today and one guys guess was that it might have been at or above at one time and underwater erosion might have brought it down. Sounds like it might work but if not i have no freakin idea.
 

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