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WEATHER

Eta re-strengthens into a tropical storm

UPDATED: NOVEMBER 7, 2020 AT 9:31 AM
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Originally Published: 07 NOV 20 10:36 ET
Updated: 07 NOV 20 11:13 ET
By Haley Brink, CNN Meteorologist

    (CNN) — Tropical Storm Eta continues to bring torrential rainfall and damaging winds to Caribbean islands Saturday.

Eta had made landfall along the coast of Nicaragua as a Category 4 hurricane Tuesday afternoon. It brought more than 2 feet of rain to parts of Nicaragua and Honduras this week. Another 2 to 5 inches of rain is still in the forecast for Saturday.

Track Eta’s path here >>>

Eta is far from over and seems headed toward islands in the western Caribbean Sea and Cuba. It is located to the west of Grand Cayman Island and has sustained winds of 50 mph with higher gusts. Tropical storm-force winds extend up to 60 miles out from the storms center.

“Grand Cayman Island recently reported estimated sustained winds of 40 mph,” the National Hurricane Center said Saturday morning.

Eta is expected to bring heavy rainfall and storm surge to the Cayman Islands and Cuba this weekend.

A Tropical Storm Warning is in effect for the Cayman Islands, portions of central Cuba, the northwestern Bahamas, and portions of South Florida, including the Keys. A Tropical Storm Watch is in effect for portions of western Cuba and the east and west coasts of Florida.

Eta is expected to strengthen over the next 18 to 24 hours prior to making landfall across central Cuba on Sunday. Isolated rainfall totals of more than 2 feet are possible for both Cuba and the Cayman Islands through the middle of next week. These high rainfall totals could lead to life-threatening flash floods and landslides in areas with higher terrain.

A dangerous storm surge threat of 2 to 4 feet is also forecast along the coast of Cuba near where Eta makes landfall Sunday.

Eta eyes southern Florida

After passing Cuba, Eta is expected to track toward and potentially over the Florida Keys on Monday and then into the Gulf of Mexico. Eta will begin to impact southern Florida on Sunday, bringing with it heavy rain and tropical storm-force winds.

A Flood Watch is in effect for much of southern Florida through Tuesday evening, where 6 to 10 inches of rainfall possible.

“Recent heavy rain across the region has led to saturated ground and urban flash flooding could become a threat by the end of the weekend and into early next week depending on the forward movement of the storm,” CNN meteorologist Derek Van Dam said.

Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez declared a state of emergency Friday as the county monitors the storm.

“We are looking at experiencing heavy rainfall through Monday and possible tropical storm force winds beginning Sunday,” Gimenez said.

Miami-Dade County will be opening an evacuation center at 2 p.m. ET Saturday for residents living in mobile homes, low-lying areas, or anyone else who needs refuge, according to a county government news release.

In addition to heavy rain, Eta is expected to bring dangerous storm surge to coastal areas of Florida. A storm surge of 2 to 3 feet is forecast from North Miami Beach to Marco Island, including Biscayne Bay and the Florida Keys. A storm surge of 1 to 2 feet is forecast for portions of the East Coast of Florida from the Flagler/Volusia County line to North Miami Beach.

After Eta passes southern Florida and the Keys, there is still uncertainty in the track into the Gulf of Mexico. There are a handful of mid- and upper-level steering patterns responsible for Eta’s seemingly erratic forecast track. Due to all of this steering, changes in the track or forward motion of Eta are likely over the weekend.

The-CNN-Wire
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