International

Mountains ‘helped Mexico dodge Patricia’s wrath’

Mountains ‘helped Mexico dodge Patricia’s wrath’

October 26, 2015 | 12:08 AM

People stand in a banana plantation destroyed by hurricane Patricia at El Rebalse community, Mexico.

 

AFP/Mexico CityMexico dodged a bullet when monster Hurricane Patricia failed to live up to its threat of devastating huge swathes of the country. What saved Mexicans? Experts say Mexico was saved from widespread destruction in big part thanks to the Sierra Madre Occidental mountains, which slowed Patricia’s wrath.The coastal region where it made landfall in western Jalisco state is also sparsely populated by fishing villages, whose residents had evacuated to shelters.The preventive evacuations by the authorities played an important role, along with a lower pressure in the north that affected Patricia’s trajectory. Patricia struck the Pacific coast as a massive Category Five hurricane late Friday, but almost 24 hours later President Enrique Pena Nieto declared that no major damage was detected. Dozens of small homes were flattened in Chamela, a fishing village in Jalisco state, and 250 more were hit by floods elsewhere. But it was not the widespread devastation expected for a hurricane that packed a record 325kms per hour winds before it made landfall. When Patricia struck the coast, its winds slowed to 270kms per hour, and gradually lost steam as it moved inland. Transport Minister Gerardo Ruiz Esparza said Mexico was “lucky” that Patricia took a last minute turn and struck the Sierra Madre. “Nature was kind-hearted,” he said. Pier Luigi Vidale, professor of climate system science at Britain’s University of Reading, said the radius of Patricia’s maximum winds was extremely small at 12kms, “so it fit very well in the space” between the towns of Campo Acosta and La Barra de Navidad. “The issue is exposure: luckily, it made landfall in a rather uninhabited region,” he said.While a second eyewall had a maximum winds radius of 100kms, the distance between two inhabited locations was about the same.“The storm continued straight to Sierra del Cuale, passing only through uninhabited zones, and rapidly lost intensity. We could hardly have been luckier,” Vidale said. Patricia was also influenced by its interaction with a low pressure extending from the north to the west of the country, said Leodegario Sanson, president of the Mexican Meteorologist Organisation. The low pressure stole some of the hurricane’s clouds and “accelerating the cyclone’s movement toward the northeast” and the mountains, Sanson said. In the past 24 hours, Patricia gradually weakened to a tropical storm, a depression and a “low remnant” as it moved northeast, according to the US National Hurricane Centre. The Philippines were not as fortunate when Super Typhoon Haiyan, with its 315kms per hour winds, left more than 7,350 dead or missing when it struck in November 2013.

October 26, 2015 | 12:08 AM