Hurricane Arthur has held steady with 90mph winds over the last 6 hours or so. The storm’s eye continues to grow more defined, with central pressure continuing to fall to 977mb. These signs point to further strengthening, and the National Hurricane Center is still forecasting Arthur to hit Category 2 strength as it makes its closest pass over North Carolina.
Track Forecast
Over the course of the day, Arthur has moved further north than originally forecast, and is only slowly beginning to make its turn towards the northeast. As a result, most forecast models have been pushed a bit further to the west. Most of the models now have Arthur making landfall somewhere over coastal North Carolina, and then passing inside the 40N, 70W benchmark offshore of the Northeast. The bottom line is that the updated forecast track increases the likelihood of adverse impacts to coastal areas all along the East Coast. This includes high surf, beach erosion, and dangerous riptides even in areas that don’t see direct impacts. This new track also puts portions of Southeastern New England under risk of experiencing tropical storm conditions, and heavy rain bands from Arthur as it passes offshore.
It’s a good thing that mandatory evacuations were placed for the Outer Banks and coastal North Carolina, as portions of these low-lying areas are forecast to experience storm surge inundation of greater than 3 feet during the peak of the storm.