Close Gallery
Zoom Picture

Miami.– The fifth tropical depression of the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season formed in the northern Gulf of Mexico on Sunday, and was forecast to pass through key U.S. oil production areas before reaching Texas or Louisiana, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

One computer model indicated the weather system could reach hurricane strength before making landfall, but the Miami-based hurricane center's official prediction called for it to top out as a tropical storm with maximum winds of 55 knots, or 63 miles per hour (102 km per hour).

It would be called Tropical Storm Edouard once its top winds reach 39 mph (63 kph). Tropical storms become hurricanes when their top sustained winds reach 74 mph (119 kph).

Much of U.S. offshore oil production is in the likely path of the storm, which could also threaten Gulf Coast refineries.

Oil companies have been working to strengthen platforms to withstand hurricane-force winds and so storm level winds should not pose an undue threat.

A series of powerful hurricanes in 2004 and 2005, including Hurricane Katrina, toppled oil rigs and severed pipelines in the Gulf, where the U.S. produces almost a third of its crude and 15 percent of its natural gas.

At 5 p.m. EDT the center of the tropical depression was located around 85 miles southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River and it was moving to the west at 6 mph (10 kph).

"On the forecast track the center of the cyclone will move parallel to the Louisiana coast tonight and Monday and approach the upper Texas coast on Tuesday," the hurricane center said.

Share / Recommend this article: Digg thisDigg this del.icio.usdel.icio.us TechnoratiTechnorati YahooYahoo
COMMENTS
2 comment(s)
Report as spam/innapropiate
Written by: GhoulishColon This user is banned, 3 Aug 2008 6:54 PM
From: United States
This puppy is headed smack into the offshore fields .. ready for higher oil and gas prices?
Report as spam/innapropiate
Written by: texasshoe, 3 Aug 2008 7:28 PM
From: United States, Houston
Nooooo,

The price is high enough already!!!! Although we can sure us the rain.
Post Your Comment | Not a member? Create your account | Lost your password?
Write your opinion here. Please keep your comment relevant to this article. Please note that any comments which contain offensive language or discriminatory expressions may be edited/removed.
You must log in to post a comment:
Username Password