MIAMI: Hurricane Ernesto was downgraded to a tropical storm after it lashed Bermuda with heavy rains and strong winds, leaving much of the British Atlantic Ocean territory without power before continuing on its path toward eastern Canada.
The hurricane, which hit Puerto Rico earlier this week, "will move away from Bermuda" on Saturday night but would still create tropical storm conditions, according to the US-based National Hurricane Center. It warned that it was possible for the storm to intensify "and Ernesto could regain hurricane status." It made landfall in Bermuda at 5:30 am local time packing maximum sustained winds of 137 kilometres per hour, the NHC said. "As Ernesto moves further away to the northeast, occasional squally showers from the west will continue to wet the Island," the Bermuda Weather Service said on Saturday night, warning that seas would remain hazardous through the night.
The island was expected to see "drier and brighter weather" on Sunday as Ernesto moved northeast and passed near southeastern Newfoundland late on Monday. Ernesto was located northeast of the island around midnight local time and was expected to dump 175 to 225 millimetres of rain on Bermuda overall. "This rainfall will likely result in considerable life-threatening flash flooding to the island, especially in low-lying areas," the NHC said.
The storm had left some 18,300 customers without electricity, Bermuda's power firm Belco reported, or more than 50 per cent of its customers on the island with a population of 64,000. Images on social media showed downed trees blocking roads, power lines damaged by the storm's high winds and flooded roads.
Ahead of the storm's arrival, Bermudians prepared by hauling boats out of the ocean, boarding up windows, filling bathtubs with water, and stocking up on batteries and food supplies. "Even though we have been downgraded from hurricane to tropical storm, we must remember that some gusts will be intense," Minister of National Security Michael Weeks said on Saturday, according to The Royal Gazette newspaper. "There are a lot of downed wires and foliage, so the situation can be dangerous," he added. Some key roads were closed and bus and ferry services were suspended, the paper said.
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