Miami’s National Hurricane Center issued a new update on Hurricane Lili, currently located northwest of Cuba, warning that “maximum sustained winds have increased to near 110 mph, with higher gusts.”
“Lili is a strong category 2 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale. Additional strengthening is forecast— and Lili could become a major hurricane today,” the bulletin continued. Hurricane force winds now extend outward up to 40 miles from the storm’s center, with lesser wind speeds out to 175 miles.
A “Hurricane Watch” is currently in effect along the Northern Gulf Coast from San Luis Pass, Texas to the mouth of the Mississippi at New Orleans. A wider “Tropical Storm Watch” is in effect over a larger area east of the Mississippi, but this could become a hurricane watch within the next 36 hours said the NHC.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Clash of Florida Titans Pits Powerful Tribe Against Homebuilder Lennar
Allianz Unit to Cut as Many as 1,800 Jobs in Push to Adopt AI
Honda’s Insurance Agency Operations Stall, Services ‘Paused’
Farmers to Pay $2.8M to Settle TPCA Class Action Lawsuit 

