Mike Isbell (top) looks through his belongings after his home was destroyed in Surfside Beach, Texas, on July 8, 2024, after Hurricane Beryl made landfall. - Hurricane Beryl made landfall July 8 in the southern US state of Texas, killing at least two people and causing millions to lose power amid dangerous winds and flooding, as some coastal areas remained under evacuation orders. Photo AFP

HOUSTON – A flood watch was in place Tuesday across multiple US states as tropical depression Beryl lashes the country’s south with heavy rain after killing at least four people in Texas.

The US National Hurricane Center (NHC) said, Beryl could bring flash flooding “from the lower and mid Mississippi Valley to the Great Lakes” through Wednesday as it sweeps across swathes of the United States.

A tornado is also possible Tuesday across parts of the south, the NHC said in its latest advisory.

Beryl was downgraded Monday evening after hitting Texas as a Category 1 hurricane, causing millions to lose power amid scorching summer heat.

The sprawling city of Houston, home to 2.3 million people, was badly battered early Monday by hurricane-strength winds and flooding, with authorities announcing at least four deaths related to the storm.

Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez said on X that a 53-year-old man and 74-year-old woman had died in separate incidents of trees falling on houses.

Later, Houston Mayor John Whitmire told a press conference that one person died after a lightning strike possibly ignited a fire, while a police department employee died in floodwaters on his way to work.

Some 2.6 million households in Texas were without electricity as of Monday evening, according to the poweroutage.us tracker, as temperatures were forecast to climb above 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 degrees Celsius) over the next few days.

Rose Michalec, 51, told AFP that Beryl blew down fences in her south Houston neighborhood.

“For a Category 1 storm, it’s quite a bit of damage… It’s more than we expected,” she said.

In downtown Houston, several areas were completely inundated, including the park where 76-year-old Floyd Robinson usually walks.

“I’m seeing more of this kind of damaging water, than I’ve ever seen before,” the life-long Houston resident told AFP.

“This is just the beginning of July and for us to have a storm of this magnitude is very rare,” he added.

Along the Texas coastline, AFP journalists saw several waterfront homes and buildings with their roofs torn off by the wind.

Several communities in the area had issued voluntary or mandatory evacuation orders ahead of the storm.

Meanwhile in the neighboring state of Louisiana, one death was announced by the Bossier Parish sheriff’s office, also by a tree falling on a home.

The deaths on Monday raise the total toll from the storm — which began its tear across the Caribbean as a powerful hurricane over a week ago — to over a dozen.

Beryl first slammed Grenada and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines as a Category 4 storm, before plowing past the Cayman Islands and Jamaica, and at one point strengthening to a highest-level Category 5.

It hit Mexico as a Category 2 hurricane on Friday, flattening trees and lampposts and ripping off roof tiles, although there were no reported deaths or injuries there.

Beryl is the first hurricane since NHC record-keeping began to reach the Category 4 level in June, and the earliest to hit the highest Category 5 in July.

It is also the earliest hurricane to make landfall in Texas in a decade, according to expert Michael Lowry.

It is extremely rare for such a powerful storm to form this early in the Atlantic hurricane season, which runs from early June to late November.

Scientists say climate change likely plays a role in the rapid intensification of storms such as Beryl because there is more energy in a warmer ocean for them to feed on.

North Atlantic waters are between two and five degrees Fahrenheit (one to three degrees Celsius) warmer than normal, according to the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. – Agency

IKUTI KAMI DI MEDIA SOSIAL

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