NORTH CAROLINA: Hurricane Erin, churning north in the Atlantic hundreds of kilometres offshore, is expected to trigger a dangerous storm surge and tropical storm conditions on Wednesday (Aug 20) along North Carolina’s Outer Banks and other stretches of the US East Coast.
The National Hurricane Center warned that roads in the low-lying barrier islands may become impassable, with waves as high as six metres
crashing ashore. The heavy surf is likely to result in significant beach erosion, it said in its 8 a.m. EDT update.
North Carolina Governor Josh Stein declared a state of emergency on Tuesday, freeing up state money and manpower to help during the storm and its aftermath.
Tropical storm and storm-surge warnings are in place for other parts of the North Carolina coastline.
Earlier in the week, the coastal counties of Dare and Hyde – which encompass most of the Outer Banks – ordered residents and tourists to evacuate the vulnerable Ocracoke and Hatteras islands, whose populations swell during the summer months.
Local media reported that ferries took more than 2,220 people off Ocracoke, with the final sailing scheduled for 11 a.m. on Wednesday. Ferries to Hatteras will continue to operate as long as conditions allow, according to ABC News affiliate WCTI.
But Chris Styron, manager of the Pony Island Inn on Ocracoke, is ignoring the evacuation orders and staying to watch over the 50-room hotel.
“We’re used to storms like this,” Styron said. “I’m born and raised here. We’re not really worried – it’s so far offshore.”
The eye of Erin, rated as a Category 2 storm with sustained winds of 155 km/h, was expected to move midway between the US East Coast and Bermuda on Wednesday and Thursday as it traveled northward, the NHC said. That trajectory will keep the worst of its winds offshore.
“LIFE-THREATENING SURF AND RIP CURRENTS”
Tropical-storm-force winds extend up to 426 km from the storm’s center, with hurricane-force winds extending for 145 kilometres.
The NHC warned beachgoers along most of the East Coast to stay out of the water because of “life-threatening surf and rip currents.”
Along the New Jersey shore, swimming and other water activities were prohibited on beaches from Cape May north to Sandy Hook, with high surf and rip current warnings in effect into Friday, the NWS said. Coastal flooding is expected to peak during high tide on Thursday.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams ordered all city public beaches – including Coney Island and Brighton Beach – to close Wednesday and Thursday.
Fortunately, temperatures in New York were expected to be seasonably cool on Wednesday and Thursday, with highs only reaching 12 Celcius, well below the average of 28 Celcius.
Erin, the fifth named storm of the 2025 Atlantic season and the first to attain hurricane status, had strengthened to a Category 5 storm. The last Atlantic storm to reach that intensity was Hurricane Milton in October 2024.