Nicholas made landfall in Texas early Tuesday morning southwest of Houston and is the eighth tropical cyclone to hit the U.S. this year. It’s battering a region that was already reeling from Ida, with about 40% of Gulf of Mexico oil production still shut-in following that storm, according to the latest update, on Tuesday.
The largest pipeline in North America has restarted shipments of fuel from Texas to the East Coast, though it’s diesel twin was still down after winds knocked out power to almost half a million homes and businesses. The blackouts also crippled operations at a natural gas export terminal about 70 miles south of Houston.
The storm is expected to bring an additional three-to-six inches of rain across the central Gulf Coast through Friday, with as much as 10 inches possible in some areas, according to the National Hurricane Center. “Life-threatening flash flooding impacts, especially in urban areas,” is possible, it said.
Nicholas is soaking the region as climate change increases the intensity of disasters from storms and hurricanes to wildfires. At least 80 people were killed after Ida hit coastal Louisiana and headed northeast earlier this month and wildfires have burned large swaths of the U.S. West this year.
Texas Blackouts
Almost 117,000 homes and businesses were without power Wednesday morning in Texas — mostly in Houston and nearby counties — down from a high of 520,000, according to PowerOutage.US, which tracks utility outages.
The blackouts forced Colonial Pipeline Co. early Tuesday to temporarily shut two pipelines, both of which are critical fuel conduits from the U.S. Gulf Coast to the Northeast. Freeport LNG said all three production units at its liquefied natural gas export terminal near Houston were down, likely due to an electricity disruption.
While Nicholas mostly bypassed the Gulf of Mexico’s oil and natural gas platforms, torrential rains pose a threat to coastal refineries and petrochemical facilities. U.S. benchmark oil futures were trading higher as of Wednesday morning.
Nicholas is the Atlantic’s 14th storm in 2021. Half of the storms so far have hit the U.S., and Ida was the season’s worst, crashing into the Louisiana coastline before devastating New York with rain and floods. On Monday, AIR Worldwide updated its projected losses from Ida, saying the storm probably caused $20 billion to $30 billion in insured losses. Earlier estimates were around $18 billion.
An average Atlantic season produces 14 storms by the time it ends in November, so 2021 is ahead of pace.
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