Category 5 Hurricane Beryl continues trek in Caribbean to Jamaica

Hurricane Beryl, a Category 5 storm, churns through the Atlantic Ocean with wind speeds reaching 169 mph. Photo: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

July 1 (UPI) — Hurricane Beryl intensified into a “potentially catastrophic Category 5 hurricane” in the eastern Caribbean late Monday as it headed for Jamaica, forecasters said, after it battered the southern Windward Islands with tropical storm conditions and made landfall in Grenada as a powerful Category 4 storm.

In its 9 p.m. MDT update, the National Hurricane Center said Beryl’s sustained winds had increased to 160 mph and was moving west-northwest at 22 mph. Beryl was about 510 miles east-southeast of Isla Beata, Dominican Republic, and about 840 miles east-southeast of Kingston, Jamaica.

The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale lists a Category 5 starting at 157 mph.

The government of Jamaica has issued a hurricane warning for the island.

A tropical storm warning is in effect for the south coast of Dominican Republic from Punta Palenque westward to the border with Haiti, and the south coast of Haiti from the border with the Dominican Republic to Anse d’Hainault.

The southern Windward Islands include Grenada, St. Vincent and the Grenadine Islands and Martinique.

On the forecast track, the center of Beryl will move quickly across the across open waters in the southeastern and central Caribbean Sea from Monday night through Tuesday. Beryl is forecast to pass near Jamaica on Wednesday.

“Fluctuations in strength are likely during the next day or so, but Beryl is expected to still be near major hurricane intensity as its moves into the central Caribbean and passes near Jamaica on Wednesday,” the NHC said.

“Some more weakening is expected thereafter, though Beryl is forecast to remain a hurricane in the northwestern Caribbean.”

The center said that hurricane-force winds extended outward up to 40 miles from the center of the eye with tropical-storm-force winds extending up to 125 miles.

Beryl had slightly weakened to a Category 3 storm early Monday with winds of 120 mph, before strengthening again to a Category 4 then a Category 5.

The storm is forecast to reach Mexico as a tropical storm on Friday.

The United States is not expected to be affected by the storm.

Beryl made landfall on Grenada’s Carriacou Island in the Caribbean Sea with maximum sustained winds of 150 mph around 11 a.m. It is the strongest known hurricane to pass through the Grenadines, according to data from NOAA since 1851.

There were “widespread reports of destruction and devastation in Carriacou and Petite Martinique,” Grenada Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell said in a Monday news briefing. “In half an hour, Carriacou was flattened.”

No immediate reports of deaths or injuries were reported.

“You have to appreciate the ferocity and the strength of the hurricane and therefore we are not yet out of the woods,” he said. “And we are not able to say for sure that no one has been injured or there has been no loss of life as a result of the hurricane.”

About 95 percent of the island of Grenada has lost power due to Hurricane Beryl, Neila K. Ettienne, press secretary for the office of the prime minister, told CNN on Monday. Telecommunications across Grenada are down, and some individuals have lost internet service, Ettienne explained.

The government had difficulty posting updates on Facebook.

On Sunday, Beryl became the earliest Category 4 hurricane on record in the Atlantic and the only Category 4 storm ever recorded in June.

It is now the earliest Category 5 storm in history.

Only seven named storms have formed over the last 173 years in this sector of the Atlantic before July 4, according to Accuweather.

Alberto, the first tropical storm of the season, made landfall over Mexico on June 20 and then pummeled Texas the next day with rain.

Tropical Storm Chis, the third named storm of the season, made landfall in eastern Mexico late Sunday.

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