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Ernesto crosses Yucatan, regains some power

By Korea Herald

Published : Aug. 9, 2012 - 19:39

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CHETUMAL, Mexico (AP) ― Tropical Storm Ernesto spun across Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula on Wednesday, then edged into the Gulf of Mexico after forcing the evacuation of thousands of tourists and fishermen from beaches in Tulum and the Costa Maya.

There were no reports of storm deaths or major damage, though Ernesto ripped down billboards, toppled trees and cut electricity as it hit the cruise ship port of Mahahual shortly before midnight Tuesday as a hurricane. It stayed south of the Yucatan’s main resorts around Cancun and the Riviera Maya.

“In many places the windows were shattered,” said Flori Cruz, a 27-year-old cook from the beach town.

Ernesto weakened to a tropical storm while moving over land early Wednesday, but it strengthened a bit in the afternoon, with sustained winds near 50 mph It was expected to regain more strength as it moved out into the extreme southern Gulf of Mexico in a region dotted with offshore oil rigs.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said that Wednesday evening the storm was about 35 kilometers east-northeast of Ciudad del Carmen, an administrative center for Mexico’s state oil company, and it was moving west at 7 mph. Ernesto was expected to stay close to the gulf coast before making a second landfall Thursday night near the key oil port of Coatzacoalcos in Veracruz state.

Petroleos Mexicanos, the state oil monopoly, said it was closely monitoring the storm, but did not report plans to evacuate any of about 200 oil platforms in the area. The federal Communications and Transportation Department closed two of the three main oil-exporting ports in the Gulf of Mexico because of the stormy conditions.

As Ernesto neared Ciudad del Carmen, Fernando Perera opened the restaurant he manages as usual, saying he wanted to work as long as possible, since more rain was expected after the storm passed.

“The wind is blowing pretty heavily, but it still feels normal,” Perera said. “But people are staying away. What we fear is the weekend.”

Officials in Veracruz set up about 20 shelters in preparation for the storm, said Victor Hugo Ceron of the state’s civil defense agency. The port captain for Veracruz city, Enrique Casarrubias, said the port there was closed to smaller vessels. He also said the Carnival Elation cruise ship canceled a Wednesday stop in the city.

Ernesto has been the strongest storm to form in the Atlantic Ocean since the hurricane season began June 1, though stronger hurricanes hit Pacific coastal communities in May and June, causing at least three deaths, said David Zelinsky, a meteorologist at the U.S. hurricane center in Miami,

“Up to this point, most of the systems have been relatively weak,” he said.

Chetumal, the capital of Quintana Roo state, was the closest sizable city to where Ernesto made its Tuesday night landfall and officials moved more than 1,300 tourists there from resorts in Mahahual, Bacalar and other spots on the Caribbean coast.

Soldiers and police also evacuated residents of low-lying coastal settlements in that state Tuesday, said Luis Gamboa of Quintana Roo’s Civil Protection office.

The Federal Electricity Commission said blackouts affected about 85,000 people in the coastal communities, and schools were closed Wednesday in Quintana Roo.

At her grocery store in Mahahual on Wednesday, Joaquina Huerfano was trying to rescue whatever food and furniture was still in good condition after the place was flooded. Water stood 60 centimeters high at the shop.

“It’s all flooded and dirty,” Huerfano said. “Now we have to get to work and clean.”