The first named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season has now formed over the Gulf of Mexico, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration confirmed on Wednesday. Image courtesy of the National Hurricane Center
June 19 (UPI) — The first named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season has now formed over the Gulf of Mexico, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration confirmed on Wednesday.
Tropical Storm Alberto was moving west-southwest at 8 nautical miles an hour, with winds gusting up to 51 mph and sustained winds of 40 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center at 5 p.m. EDT.
The first bands of rain associated with Alberto began hitting the coastal United States early Wednesday morning, according to the NWS.
Radar loop from 630-730AM. The first bands of rain associated with the tropical disturbance have reached the coast and are moving into the inland Coastal Plains. We expect some of this rain to impact the I-35 corridor this afternoon. pic.twitter.com/6zbnAPEdeS— NWS Austin/San Antonio (@NWSSanAntonio) June 19, 2024
Forecasters warned motorists the storm could start affecting the I-35 corridor as early as Wednesday afternoon.
The storm is expected to move farther inland early Thursday morning, bringing up to 15 inches of rain to parts of Texas and Louisiana, in what forecasters are calling a “very active” 2024 hurricane season. Alberto is also expected to affect parts of northeastern Mexico, where officials have warned of potential mudslides around the cities of Monterrey and Ciudad Victoria.
The National Hurricane Center has issued multiple tropical storm warnings across the Texas coast from San Luis Pass near Galveston to the mouth of the Rio Grande River. Authorities are cautioning the storm surge from Alberto could reach as high as 4 feet.
The Texas cities of Galveston and Surfside Beach were already seeing flooding as of 12 p.m. EDT Wednesday. The heaviest rain in that state is predicted to fall in south Corpus Christi.
“Extensive coastal flooding has been reported at area beaches, coastlines. No changes to existing warnings,” the NWS Houston office said in its latest update.
Alberto is not the only storm system currently moving towards the United States.
The NHC and Central Pacific Hurricane Center are tracking a storm currently located several hundred miles east of the Bahamas.
“Environmental conditions are marginally conducive for some gradual development of this system during the next few days while it moves westward or west-northwestward,” the center said in its latest update.
“The system is forecast to approach the coast of the southeastern United States by the latter part of this week.”