Wicked winter storm threatens US holiday travel chaos


Airlines have told holiday travellers to brace for delays and cancellations as an Arctic cold front grips the US northern Plains, sweeps through the Midwest and heads towards the East Coast in the days before Christmas. – EPA pic, December 22, 2022.

A “ONCE-IN-A-GENERATION” winter storm was threatening yesterday to wreak havoc with holiday travel plans for millions of Americans.

The National Weather Service (NWS) warned that the storm would produce “a multitude of weather hazards,” including blizzards and life-threatening wind chill, across the northern, central and eastern parts of the country.

Airlines told holiday travellers to brace for delays and cancellations as an Arctic cold front grips the northern Plains yesterday, sweeps through the Midwest and heads towards the East Coast on Friday just before Christmas.

“This will not be your average cold front as temperatures could drop 20 or more degrees within a few hours,” the NWS said, bringing “record-breaking frigid temperatures” to the Gulf Coast and eastern United States by Friday.

It said the Great Lakes region could expect more than 30cm of snow.

“Wind chill values could drop as low as minus 57 degrees Celsius throughout parts of the central High Plains,” the NWS said, warning that “cold of this magnitude could lead to frostbite on exposed skin within minutes.”

“Prepare now for extreme cold and ensure outdoor animals and livestock have sufficient shelter,” it said.

The NWS said wind gusts of over 80pkh and snow will result in blizzard conditions from the northern and central Plains to the Great Lakes, creating “extremely dangerous travel conditions for both drivers and air travel.”

The storm comes as the Transportation Security Administration said it expects holiday travel volume to be close to pre-pandemic levels, with the busiest day today.

The American Automobile Association estimated that more than 112 million people will travel 80km or more from home between Friday and January 2, the vast majority – 102 million – by car.

‘Bomb cyclone’

The Federal Aviation Administration warned that high winds and heavy snow could delay flights at major air travel hubs Minneapolis-St Paul, Chicago and Denver.

In Denver, for example, the temperature was expected to plummet from a high of around 10C yesterday to minus 26C today.

Authorities in the Colorado capital have opened the Denver Coliseum as an emergency warming center.

AccuWeather forecasters said the storm could rapidly strengthen into what is known as a “bomb cyclone” through a process known as “bombogenesis,” when the barometric pressure drops and a cold air mass collides with a warm air mass.

The NWS in Buffalo, New York called it a “once-in-a-generation storm” with wind gusts of over 104kph, wind chill as low as minus 12C to to minus 29C , and scattered or possibly widespread power outages.

Forecasters in Minneapolis described it as a “high-end, life-threatening event” that “needs to be taken seriously.”

In Fort Worth, Texas, the NWS told residents the cold snap was not expected to be as devastating as the one in February of last year, when freezing temperatures knocked out power to millions in the Lone Star State and caused dozens of deaths.

And in Washington, lawmakers were scrambling to complete work on a sweeping US$1.7 (RM7.5) trillion spending package before the massive winter storm complicates travel plans. – AFP, December 22, 2022.


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