Hurricane Ida kills 91 in El Salvador …aims for Gulf of Mexico oil fields

CANCUN, Mexico, (Reuters) – Hurricane Ida roared into  the Gulf of Mexico yesterday, where important oil fields are  located, after killing 91 people and leaving at least another  60 missing in floods and mudslides in El Salvador.

Ida swept past the Mexican resort of Cancun, doing little  damage to the city, and is expected to weaken gradually today as it heads toward some of the oil and gas production  facilities in the central Gulf, the U.S. National Hurricane  Center said.

The storm reached hurricane force again late on Saturday  and strengthened to a Category 2 storm yesterday with sustained  winds of near 105 mph (165 kph), the Miami-based hurricane  center said in its 4 p.m. EST (2100 GMT) advisory.

Some energy companies in the Gulf of Mexico were evacuating  workers from offshore platforms and BP Plc <BP.L> said it had  shut down an undisclosed amount of oil and gas production as a  precautionary measure.

The Louisiana Offshore Oil Port, the only terminal in the  United States capable of handling the largest tankers, said it  would stop unloading ships due to stormy seas.

A quarter of U.S. oil and 15 percent of its natural gas are  produced from fields in the Gulf and the coast is home to 40  percent of the nation’s refining capacity.

The hurricane centre set a hurricane watch from Grand Isle,  Louisiana, to Mexico Beach in northwestern Florida, but did not  include the city of New Orleans. A hurricane watch means  hurricane conditions are expected in the area within 36 hours.

Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal declared a state of  emergency yesterday, allowing the government to mobilize troops  and rescue workers.
If Ida makes landfall in Louisiana it would be the first  storm to strike the state since Hurricane Gustav came ashore in  September 2008.
In El Salvador, rivers burst their banks and hillsides  collapsed under relentless rains triggered by Ida’s passage,  cutting off parts of the mountainous interior from the rest of  the country.

El Salvador’s government said 91 people were killed and at  least 60 were missing as a result of deadly mudslides and  floods.
As of 7 p.m. EST (0000 GMT), Ida was 445 miles (720 km)  south-southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi river, the  hurricane centre said. It was moving north-northwest near 12  mph (19 kph) and was forecast to turn toward the north over the  next two days.

About 1,000 people were evacuated from Mexico’s Holbox  Island, an isolated fishing community and sanctuary for  thousands of flamingos and other exotic birds located northwest  of Cancun.

Ida first became a hurricane on Thursday off the Caribbean  coast of Nicaragua, where heavy rains forced more than 5,000  people into shelters.

The country’s coffee crop was not directly affected by the  storm, according to the local coffee council.