Tropical Storm Gert Strengthens, Will Brush Bermuda

August 15, 2011

Tropical Storm Gert strengthened slowly Sunday on a track toward Bermuda and forecasters said the global reinsurance hub could expect increased winds, rain and surf when the storm passed on its eastern side.

Gert, the seventh named storm of what is proving as predicted to be an active 2011 Atlantic hurricane season, formed earlier Sunday but its forecast ocean track will keep it well away from the heavily populated U.S. east coast.

Authorities in Bermuda, a small British overseas territory which has a population of more than 68,000 and hosts 16 of the world’s top 35 reinsurers, issued a tropical storm warning.

The rocky archipelago is well prepared for the tropical storms and hurricanes that sweep across the Atlantic from June to November and storm fatalities are rare there.

At 5 p.m. EDT, Gert’s top winds had increased to 45 miles per hour [72 km/h] and the storm was located about 255 miles [408 kms] south southeast of Bermuda, moving northwestward, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

“The center of Gert is expected to pass near or just east of Bermuda by Monday afternoon,” the Miami-based hurricane center said, adding that the storm was expected to strengthen over the next 48 hours. But the storm was not expected to turn into a hurricane.

The Bermuda Weather Service warned residents to expect winds and rain showers increasing later Sunday as the storm approached from the south. Tropical storm force winds should develop over the east of the territory by early Monday.

The hurricane center said large swells generated by Gert were likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip currents.

Jeff Masters, a hurricane expert at private forecaster Weather Underground, said in his blog Sunday the 2011 season was so far seeing an unusual number of weak tropical cyclones.

This is nevertheless forecast to be a busy year for hurricanes.

Late Saturday, Tropical Storm Franklin, which formed briefly earlier in the weekend as the sixth named storm of the 2011 Atlantic season, lost its tropical cyclone characteristics over the North Atlantic.

Elsewhere in the Atlantic, forecasters were watching a low pressure trough located some 425 miles [680 kms] northeast of the northern Leeward Islands. The NHC gave it a medium chance of becoming a tropical cyclone in the next 48 hours, saying conditions were only marginally favorable for it to develop.

Some weather watchers also recommended keeping an eye on another disturbed weather system moving west between the coast of Africa and the Lesser Antilles, in case it developed and eventually posed a threat to the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico.

(Reporting by Pascal Fletcher; Editing by Todd Eastham)

Topics Catastrophe Natural Disasters Windstorm Hurricane

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