
At Eye on the Storm, meteorologist Jeff Masters notes that Tampa–St. Petersburg has been rated essentially the most susceptible metropolitan space within the nation to storm-surge harm, to the extent {that a} Class 4 storm that makes landfall simply north of the realm may do an estimated $230 billion in harm. Provides Masters:
A lot of the inhabitants within the four-county Tampa Bay area lives alongside the coast in low-lying areas, about 50 p.c of it at an elevation of lower than 10 ft. Greater than 800,000 folks reside in evacuation zones for a Class 1 hurricane, and a couple of million folks reside in evacuation zones for a Class 5 hurricane, in line with the 2010 Statewide Regional Evacuation Examine for the Tampa Bay Area. Provided that solely 46% of the folks within the evacuation zones for a Class 1 hurricane evacuated when an evacuation order was given as 2004’s Class 4 Hurricane Charley threatened the area, the potential exists for prime lack of life when the following main hurricane hits.
Two weeks in the past, Helene didn’t even get all that shut, however nonetheless walloped the metro space:
Regardless of its middle passing 130 miles (205 km) to the west of Tampa Bay on Sep. 26, Hurricane Helene introduced the bay its highest storm surge since record-keeping started in 1947, with water ranges 5-8 ft above dry floor. In line with native station fox13news.com, harm was heavy within the four-county Tampa Bay area: Pinellas County (residence of St. Petersburg) had 28,000 broken buildings, Pasco County had 9,900, and there have been 8,600 in Manatee and Sarasota counties mixed. Twelve storm-related deaths occurred in Pinellas County, two in Manatee County, and two in Hillsborough County.
Masters outlined essentially the most troubling attainable eventualities for Tampa:
Our 5 prime hurricane-specific forecast fashions – the HWRF, HMON, HAFS-A, HAFS-B, and COAMPS-TC – have been portray some extraordinarily ugly attainable futures for Tampa Bay from Hurricane Milton. At the very least one run in current days from all of those fashions have predicted Milton would obtain Cat 4 or Cat 5 power on Tuesday or Wednesday. Lots of the runs have proven a landfall simply north of Tampa Bay, which might maximize the surge within the bay. Nonetheless, many current runs of those fashions have predicted that top wind shear and dry air would mix to disrupt Milton’s core earlier than landfall, inflicting speedy weakening, with a possible Cat 1 or Cat 2 landfall ensuing. Sadly, such a speedy weakening would enable the hurricane’s strongest winds to unfold out over a bigger space, leading to a dangerous surge attribute of a Cat 3 hurricane affecting a bigger portion of the coast. Essentially the most devastating situation for Tampa Bay painted by any of the mannequin runs from 6Z (2 a.m. EDT) Monday was from the brand new HAFS-B mannequin, which confirmed Milton hitting as a big Cat 3 with 115 mph (185 km/h) winds simply north of Tampa Bay (Fig. 3). Such a storm would possible generate a storm surge within the bay in extra of 10 ft, inflicting over $10 billion in harm. The HAFS-B mannequin outperformed all the opposite fashions for 3-, 4-, and 5-day forecasts final 12 months. …
With the brand new 6Z Monday runs of the HWRF, HMON, HAFS-A, HAFS-B, COAMPS-TC, GFS, and European fashions, all painted variations of a dire situation for Milton for Tampa Bay, displaying a landfall simply to the north of or over Tampa Bay. The one mannequin displaying a best-case situation for them was the 0Z Monday run of the UKMET mannequin, which depicted a landfall close to Fort Myers, about 80 miles south of Tampa Bay.