By Adriana Navarro, AccuWeather staff writer
Published Jul. 23, 2020 11:31 PM | Updated Jul. 24, 2020 12:21 PM
Another Atlantic basin record fell Thursday night as Tropical Storm Hanna formed over the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico. Packing 45 mph winds, moving west-northwest at a speed of 9 mph and about 260 miles east of Corpus Christi, Texas, Hanna on Friday was on a crash course with the Texas Gulf Coast, threatening impacts as soon as later in the day.
NOAA hurricane hunters investigated the storm late Thursday evening and officials at the National Hurricane Center (NHC) made the call to upgrade the storm to tropical storm status late Thursday night. Another investigation conducted on Friday showed the storm had strengthened some.
Tropical storm watches and warnings were put into in effect Thursday afternoon across a large portion of the Texas Gulf Coast. As for when and where Hanna could come ashore, AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Alex Sosnowski said, "We expect the system to make landfall as a solid tropical storm along the central Texas coast sometime during the day on Saturday." He said AccuWeather meteorologists believe the Corpus Christi area is near where the storm will come ashore, possibly about 45 miles south of there in Baffin Bay, Texas.
Tropical storm warnings were in effect across portions of central and southern Texas on Friday, July 24, 2020. (AccuWeather)
Sosnowski also cautioned that there's a chance Hanna could strengthen into a hurricane, and become the Atlantic basin's first of the year now that Tropical Storm Gonzalo is encountering conditions unfavorable for much strengthening. "Considering that water temperatures are well into the 80s along its path, Hanna has a chance of rapidly strengthening prior to landfall on Saturday and could become a hurricane before doing so," Sosnowski said.
"At the very least," Sosnowski added, "Hanna will likely be a strong tropical storm at landfall with wind gusts to at least 70 mph."
AccuWeather forecasters have rated the storm a 1 on the AccuWeather RealImpact Scale for Hurricanes, a more nuanced method the company introduced in 2019 to assess the potential damage a tropical system could cause.
Even before the storm became a depression, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday urged urged "Texans to remain vigilant and closely monitor weather conditions" heading into the weekend. In a statement, Abbott said he was "preparing state resources to assist communities with potential flooding and heavy rainfall." By Friday, Abbott was echoing his warning to Texans about the tropical storm threat and also updating residents on the growing COVID-19 crisis impacting much of his state.
Heavy rain will pose the greatest risk to lives and property along the Gulf Coast, forecasters say. A general 2-4 inches of rain is forecast to fall across a wide area of southeast Texas and southern Louisiana. Places closer to the coast, including Corpus Christi, Galveston and even into portions of the Rio Grande Valley could see between 4 and 8 inches of rainfall. An AccuWeather Local StormMax™ of 12 inches is anticipated.
Locally heavy rainfall, enough to produce some flash flooding, will occur across parts of Louisiana and Texas Friday and Saturday, regardless of precisely where the storm comes ashore. "Some of the rain will be beneficial," Sosnowski said, adding, "but too much rain may also fall -- perhaps close to a foot in some areas of South Texas -- which will lead to flooding."
Low-water crossings -- rough paved roads that go through shallow streams with typically only a few inches of water flowing over top, which are prevalent in the area -- will become too dangerous to navigate. Sosnowski said that in addition to some places in Texas seeing up to a foot of rain, even more rain could fall in the mountains of Mexico as the storm crosses the border while moving farther inland.
Gusty onshore winds could also lead to rough surf and rip currents along the central and western Gulf Coast into the weekend.
"How much impact from wind will depend on the strength of the system as it moves ashore in Texas," Sosnowski said.
"There can be some gusty thunderstorms and perhaps a couple of tornadoes or waterspouts around the time of landfall at the close of the week," Sosnowski said.
The strongest winds will be near and just north of where the center makes landfall but gusty winds can extend 100 miles or more to the north of the large system.
An uptick in rough surf including the frequency and strength of rip currents is in store along the western and central Gulf Coast of the United States into Saturday with the big storm acting like a giant plunger.
AccuWeather National Reporter Bill Waddell is on the ground in Corpus Christi and will be there as the storm moves through. On Thursday, he spoke with Lori Ramirez, a Corpus Christi native who recently moved back there. Ramirez told Waddell that many who live there consider tropical storms "a part of life" but that Hurricane Harvey, which devastated the region nearly three years ago, rattled people, causing many to take more precautions than they might have in the past with a storm approaching.
"I'm a little nervous, but you've gotta be prepared, especially when you're living by the water," Ramirez told Waddell. "When it gets to hurricanes, you start to worry," she said, adding that's when she activates a plan "in case we need to get out of here."
"While we expect Hanna to move at a steady pace, unlike that of Harvey, it will be moving slowly and that can still unleash a lot of rain and raise the risk of major flooding over South Texas and part of northern Mexico," Sosnowski said.
As much as 16 inches (400 millimeters) of rain can fall on the mountains of northern Mexico from the slow-moving storm.
Hanna is the latest named storm in what has already been a remarkably busy Atlantic hurricane season, and one that AccuWeather meteorologists have been warning for months would be "very active."
With its formation, Hanna earned the distinction of being the earliest-recorded "H" named storm in Atlantic basin history. Prior to Hanna, the earliest eighth-named storm was Tropical Storm Harvey from 2005, which formed on Aug. 3. The name Harvey was retired after Hurricane Harvey devastated the Houston area with more than 60 inches of rain in 2017.
Meanwhile, a strengthening Tropical Storm Gonzalo, a record-breaker in its own right on Wednesday, was churning in the central Atlantic Ocean, and threatening to become the season's first Atlantic basin hurricane. Tropical Storm Gonzalo became the earliest "G" named storm.
Hanna’s formation while Gonzalo continued to churn as an active storm in the Atlantic was fairly unusual during the month of July. It has been a couple of years since there were two simultaneous named storms in the Atlantic — the last occurrence happened in July 2018 when both Beryl and Chris swirled across the basin, according to Philip Klotzbach, a tropical meteorologist at Colorado State University.
There have been other active tropical storm duos in the Atlantic since 2000, including Cindy and Dennis in 2005, Franklin and Gert in 2005, Bertha and Cristobal in 2008 and Cristobal and Dolly in 2008. Additionally, Dolly from 2008 was the last tropical storm to make landfall in the Lone Star state during the month of July, Klotzbach said. More recently, Bret and Cindy were both active storms in the Atlantic during the 2011 hurricane season.
Three tropical storms that proceeded Gonzalo -- Cristobal, Edouard and Fay -- had also been the earliest storms of their respective letters.
Tropical trio: Douglas, Hanna and Gonzalo captured in a single satellite image on Thursday night, July 23, 2020. (NOAA / GOES-EAST)
And over in the Pacific basin, Hurricane Douglas, the Western Hemisphere's first hurricane of 2020, had exploded to Category 4 strength by Thursday night and was packing 130-mph sustained winds as it charged toward the Hawaiian Islands. AccuWeather meteorologists expect Douglas to weaken considerably before impacting Hawaii. But, the storm added to what is a stunning satellite image showing just how busy the tropics were during the third week of July. Douglas, Gonzalo and Hanna were all visible in one shot from NOAA's GOES-EAST satellite.
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