Louisiana coast braces for Tropical Storm Lee

NEW ORLEANS, (Reuters) – Tropical Storm Lee  threatened the Louisiana coast today with torrential rains  and flooding and shut nearly half of U.S. offshore crude oil  production and a third of offshore gas production.
The slow-moving storm is expected to reach the Louisiana  coast early on Sunday and bring 10-15 inches (25-38 cm) of rain  to southeast Louisiana over the weekend, including low-lying  New Orleans, battered by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the U.S.  National Hurricane Center said.
Lee was about 185 miles (295 km) southwest of the  Mississippi River’s mouth, with maximum winds of 45 mph (75  kph), the hurricane center said. Its heavy rain and gusty winds  were already buffeting the Louisiana coast, it said.
Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal warned that heavy rains,  substantial winds and tidal surges from the Gulf of Mexico  could produce flash flooding in parts of New Orleans throughout  the Labor Day holiday weekend.
“Get ready for the wind, get ready for the rain, it’s  coming and it’s going to be here for a while,” Jindal said at a  briefing in Baton Rouge. Jindal has declared a state of  emergency for Louisiana, and Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour  made a similar ruling for seven coastal counties.
Lee has a 50-60 percent chance of reaching hurricane  strength, AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Bernie Rayno told  Reuters Insider.
“The problem with this system is that it’s so slow-moving,”  Rayno said. “The big story is going to be the flooding.”
Major offshore producers like Royal Dutch Shell,  Exxon Mobil Corp and BP Plc shut down platforms and evacuated  staff earlier this week.
About half the U.S. offshore oil production, all based in  the Gulf of Mexico, and a third of offshore gas production were  shut today, according to the U.S. government. Most of that  output should quickly return once the storm passes.