By Steven Yablonski , Emilee Speck , Scott Sistek, FOX Weather
Tropical Storm Helene is rapidly organizing Wednesday and is expected to become a major hurricane as it approaches Florida while residents rush to finish preparing for a potentially deadly storm surge, destructive hurricane-force winds and flooding rain.
The National Hurricane Center (NHC) said there is danger of a life-threatening storm surge along the entire west coast of the Florida peninsula and Big Bend.
As the storm comes ashore late Thursday, the Big Bend area is expected to experience the highest water levels — as much as 15 feet above dry land.
Tampa Bay could see 5 to 8 feet of storm surge inundation under current forecasts.
Mandatory evacuation orders are in effect for swaths of Florida’s Gulf Coast, from the Panhandle, across the Big Bend and into southwest Florida. Gov. Ron DeSantis issued an executive order Tuesday declaring a state of emergency for 61 of the state’s 67 counties to help agencies prepare for the incoming storm.
What is the forecast for Tropical Storm Helene?
According to the NHC’s Wednesday morning update, Helene’s maximum sustained winds have ramped up to at least 70 mph with higher gusts. The system is moving northwest, and that general motion is expected through Wednesday morning. It will be followed by a turn to the north starting later Wednesday.
Helene is expected to rapidly intensify into a major hurricane, meaning winds of at least 111 mph, as it moves over the eastern Gulf of Mexico and approaches the northeastern Gulf Coast on Thursday. The current 120-mph peak intensity forecast would rate the storm a Category 3 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Scale.
A hurricane warning has been issued for a 300-plus-mile stretch from Anclote River to Mexico Beach, Florida, where damaging hurricane-force winds are expected later Thursday.
The NHC is urging those in the warning areas to complete any preparations by early Thursday.
Tropical storm warnings are in effect for all the Florida Keys, Dry Tortugas and over 300 miles of the west coast of Florida from Flamingo to Anclote River, including Tampa Bay, west of Mexico Beach to the Walton/Bay County line, and over 450 miles along the east coast of Florida from Flamingo northward to the mouth of the St. Mary’s River, and Lake Okeechobee.
Helene is expected to be a large hurricane — perhaps ranking in the 90th percentile among typical hurricanes of the area, according to the NHC.
“Therefore, storm surge, wind, and rainfall impacts will likely extend well away from the center and outside the forecast cone, particularly on the east side,” NHC forecasters said Tuesday.
National Hurricane Center deputy director Jamie Rhome said Helene will be unique for its large size and the intensification it’s expected to undergo over the next 24 hours.
“A lot of people wrongly use the current intensity, how it looks currently in satellite imagery, as their overall indicator of risk, not what the storm will be when it moves ashore or moves into their community, but how it looks right now,” Rhome told Fox Weather.
Storm surge, flooding a major concern
With the large storm size and track, a life-threatening storm surge is possible. Water could reach 10 to 15 feet above dry level if the surge comes in at high tide between the Ochlockonee River and Chassahowitzka along Florida’s Big Bend, according to the NHC.
A storm surge of varying heights is expected all along the entire west coast of Florida, with higher levels expected the closer you get to Helene’s eventual landfall.
Torrential rains from Helene will bring “considerable” flash and urban flooding across the Southeast, according to the NHC, with accumulations of 4 to 8 inches and isolated totals of about 12 inches. Significant river flooding is also a risk.
Helene impacts could reach far inland
As future Hurricane Helene sets its sights on Florida, residents have been busy preparing for the storm as state and local officials begin to issue mandatory evacuation orders and declare states of emergency.
But Helene isn’t just expected to cause problems for Florida. Tropical storm-force winds could cause power outages across the Southeast as Helene moves farther inland. On Tuesday, President Biden approved federal assistance for Georgia, where Gov. Brian Kemp declared a state of emergency.
Helene will also be a rainmaker for the Southeast.
“The other unique thing about big storms is they can hang on to that momentum and carry that momentum farther inland, both the wind and in this case, the rain,” Rhome said in front of a map showing expected impacts across the Southeast. “Look how far inland it reaches, all the way up into Atlanta, to upstate South Carolina and possibly even western North Carolina could feel significant impacts from this system down the line.”