Det har skjedd før at de har kommet inn i "vårt" område, men da har den mistet mye kraft. Det kan bli en del nedbør. Vi vert mye om hva dette kan betyr for luftfart og skipsfart naturligvis. (Red.)
Hurricane Fiona: Canada braces for 'historic,
extreme event'
Residents
along Canada's Atlantic Coast have been warned by officials to brace for impact
as Hurricane Fiona heads north after pummelling Bermuda.
The
Canadian Hurricane Centre warned that Fiona - expected to reach Canada's shores
by Saturday morning - could be "a historic, extreme event".
Authorities
have warned of potential coastal flooding, power outages and dangerous driving
conditions.
At
least eight people in Fiona's path through the Caribbean have died.
Canadian
forecasters said late on Friday that Fiona - now a category three storm - was
packing maximum sustained winds of up to 120 mph (195km/h), though this is
projected to decrease as it makes landfall.
"It's
going to be a bad one," Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday.
"We encourage everyone to stay safe and to listen to the instructions of
local authorities and hang in there for the next 24 hours."
Tropical
storm warnings have been issued for the Atlantic provinces of Nova Scotia,
Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and New Brunswick, as well as in parts of
Quebec.
The
country's eastern region could receive up to 10in (25cm) of rain, increasing
the risk of flash flooding.
In
Nova Scotia, shelters have been prepared in Halifax and Cape Breton - where the
storm is projected to make landfall - for people to take cover ahead of the
storm.
"We
have been through these types of events before, but my fear is, not to this
extent," said Amanda McDougall, mayor of Cape Breton Regional
Municipality.
"The
impacts are going to be large, real and immediate."
Severe
hurricanes in Canada are rare, as storms lose their energy once they hit colder
waters in the north and become post-tropical instead. But pressure in the
region is predicted to be historically low as Hurricane Fiona hits, making way
for a heavier storm.
Nova
Scotia was last battered by a tropical cyclone in 2003 with Hurricane Juan, a
category two storm that killed two people and heavily damaged structures and
vegetation.
Meteorologist
Bob Robichaud warned on Friday afternoon that Fiona will be bigger than Juan,
and stronger than 2019's Hurricane Dorian, which also reached the shores of
Nova Scotia.
"It
is certainly going to be a historic, extreme event for Atlantic Canada."
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