Tropical Storm Eta strengthened into Hurricane Eta early Monday while heading for Central America, with forecasters warning it could prove “devastating.” Eta, whose formation tied a record for the most named storms in as single season, is expected to hit Nicaragua’s coast early Tuesday.
A hurricane warning was in effect there.
Eta had maximum sustained winds of 110 mph late Monday morning, up from 75 mph hours in the overnight hours, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said. It was centered about 140 miles east of the Nicaragua-Honduras border and heading west at 10 mph.
The center said aircraft have noted the storm’s rapid strengthening, and warned that it could reach Category 4 by the time it makes landfall.
Hurricane Eta churning off Central American coast ealry on November 2, 2020.
National Hurricane Center
CBS News weather producer David Parkinson stressed that the storm will be “devastating” to Central America “with those wind speeds near the coast and a torrent of 15-35 inches of rain inland. Mudslides are a near certainty in Nicaragua along with Guatemala and Honduras, and potentially even Mexico, too. The rain isn’t likely to come to an end before Friday.”
The U.S. National Hurricane Center, in Miami, said Eta will bring a “life-threatening” storm surge of 12 to 18 feet, damaging winds, flash flooding and mudslides.
The center said Eta will weaken once in moves inland.
Eta is the 28th named Atlantic storm this season, tying the 2005 record for named storms. However, this is the first time the Greek letter Eta is being used as a storm name because after the 2005 season ended, meteorologists went back and determined there had been a storm that should have gotten a name but didn’t.
Hurricane season still has a month to go, officially ending on November 30. But in 2005, Zeta formed toward the end of December.