Tropical Depression 18 Likely To Become Rafael
Nov 04, 2024
Tropical Depression 18 has formed in the south central Caribbean Sea and is expected to strengthen into Tropical Storm Rafael later today. It is currently located about 195 miles south of Kingston, Jamaica and 400 miles southeast of the Grand Cayman. The tropical depression has sustained winds of 35 mph with a minimum central pressure of 1003 mb. It is moving north at 9 mph, and is forecast to shift northwest later today, impacting Jamaica tonight. It will near the Cayman Islands Tuesday and approach western Cuba as a hurricane Wednesday before moving into the Gulf of Mexico.
The storm is expected to intensify and is forecast to become a hurricane by Wednesday. It will face increased wind shear and drier air in the Central Gulf of Mexico late week. This could lead to potential weakening. Although the storm will not have any direct impacts for the Carolinas, an approaching cold front late week, could help funnel moisture from the Gulf northward into the Carolinas leading to greater rain chances late week into the weekend.
Watches and Warnings
Hurricane Warning: Cayman Islands
Hurricane Watch: Western Cuba
Tropical Storm Warning: Jamaica
Tropical Storm Watch: Central and Eastern Cuba
Impacts
Rainfall: 3-6 inches with localized totals up to 9 inches may lead to flooding and mudslides for Jamaica and Cuba
Storm Surge: 2-4 feet possible along Cuba’s southern coast
Wind: Hurricane force winds in the Cayman Islands by Tuesday and in Cuba by Wednesday
Surf: Dangerous swells and rip current risks for much of the western Caribbean