Tropical Depression in Gulf of Mexico Strengthens, Closes Ports

A tropical depression in the southern Gulf of Mexico is strengthening, prompting the closure of two top oil export terminals, and should unleash life-threatening flooding, the U.S. National Hurricane Center (NHC) said on Thursday.

The depression, called Ten, was expected to enhance over the following 24 hours into a tropical storm, the center said.

The country’s two biggest oil export terminals, Dos Bocas and Cayo Arcas, were closed, the government said, although the port of Coatzacoalcos remained open.

The closure of oil export hubs in the course of the hurricane season is probably not uncommon and unless the closures persist for days, they rarely affect overall export deliveries.

An official with state oil monopoly Pemex said the company was closely monitoring the depression, but that to this point there were no installation closures or impact on operations.

Pemex’s best oil fields are located inside the vicinity of the depression, inside the shallow waters of the Bay of Campeche. The company’s Lazaro Cardenas refinery in Veracruz state appears to be like in its path.

The center of the slow-moving depression is located 165 miles (270 km) north-northeast of the coastal city of Veracruz, moving at 5 mph [8 km/h] toward land with maximum sustained winds of 35 mph [56 km/h].

The depression is anticipated to become a tropical storm on Friday, and between 10 to 15 inches [25.4 to 38.1 cms] of rainfall is projected once it makes landfall, the NHC said.

A tropical storm warning is in effect from the Gulf coast port of Coatzacoalcos north to Barra de Nautla.

(Reporting by NR Sethuraman in Bangalore and David Alire Garcia in Mexico City; Editing by Simon Gardner and Joseph Radford)

IJ Ed. Note: The NHC also advised that Humberto, the principle hurricane of the present season, is expected to weaken to a tropical storm over here 24 hours.