Hurricane Francine hit the Louisiana coast earlier than transferring inland, leaving a whole lot of 1000’s with out energy and inflicting huge flooding.
The Nationwide Hurricane Middle (NHC) mentioned it made landfall in Morgantown as a Class 2 storm at 17:00 native time (23:00 GMT) on Wednesday, with winds of 100 mph (155 km/h).
Rainfall quantities reached 6 to eight inches (15-20 cm), and a flash flood emergency warning was issued in New Orleans.
The NHC mentioned late Wednesday that Francine had been downgraded to a tropical storm however was nonetheless packing winds of as much as 70 mph because it handed northwest of New Orleans.

Louisiana and neighboring Mississippi have each declared states of emergency and advised residents to take shelter and put together for main storms.
Gov. Jeff Landry mentioned at a information convention Wednesday that residents ought to “get off the roads, keep house, keep the place they’re.”
Forecasters mentioned Francine was anticipated to proceed dropping energy “quickly” because it moved throughout the state.
Forecasters mentioned a lot of central and jap Louisiana was anticipated to obtain 4 to eight inches (10 to twenty centimeters) of rain, which may set off tornadoes and damaging winds.
As of Wednesday night, greater than 330,000 houses and companies in Louisiana have been with out energy, in keeping with Poweroutages.us.
A brand new twister warning has been issued for components of southeastern Louisiana, southern Mississippi, southwestern Alabama and the Florida Panhandle till 06:00 native time on Thursday (12:00 BST).
Officers in Jefferson Parish within the better New Orleans space urged residents to remain house attributable to “extreme avenue flooding” Wednesday night time.
In the meantime, the Morgantown Police Division mentioned town is experiencing “unusually extreme flooding” and requested individuals to not drive on flooded streets.
Life-threatening storm surge warnings are in place for residents in jap Louisiana, Mississippi, southern Alabama and western Florida.
Storm surge means there’s a danger of water rising from the shoreline and transferring inland. Water ranges could rise to 10 toes (3 m) in some locations.
All flights out and in of New Orleans Airport Canceled Wednesday.
A number of coastal parishes within the state have been below voluntary or obligatory evacuation orders. Some colleges and faculties have been closed.
U.S. oil and gasoline corporations within the Gulf of Mexico, together with Exxon Mobil and Shell, evacuated workers and suspended some operations.


Jefferson Parish, which borders New Orleans, is asking residents to preserve water to forestall sewer techniques from backing up into houses.
New Orleans reported that some cellphone customers have been unable to name 911.
Louisiana just lately marked the nineteenth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, which killed greater than 1,800 individuals and induced widespread destruction.
The governor mentioned the state mobilized sources and deployed water rescue groups forward of Francine’s arrival and was ready to name on the Nationwide Guard for assist if wanted.
Francine’s improvement follows a quiet August and early September through the Atlantic hurricane season, which usually lasts till November. Earlier this summer time, consultants predicted a busier season.
BBC climate presenter Sarah Keith-Lucas mentioned the hurricane adopted “a interval of very calm climate within the Atlantic basin”.
“The final named storm within the space was Ernesto on August 12,” she mentioned.
“The final time there have been no named storms throughout the identical interval was 1968. Sometimes, this time of 12 months is peak hurricane season. 9 named storms shaped between August 13 and September 8 final 12 months.”
Francine is the sixth named storm of 2024.
Hurricanes are labeled as Class 1 to Class 5. Class 5 storms are essentially the most harmful, with wind speeds exceeding 157 mph (250 km/h).
There have been 19 named storms throughout final 12 months’s hurricane season.