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WEATHER IMPACT | 10 P.M. UPDATE: Tropical Storm Beryl heads toward Texas Gulf Coast

The KHOU 11 weather team is watching what impacts the storm could have on the Texas Gulf Coast.

HOUSTON — As of 10 p.m. Friday, Beryl remained a Tropical Storm with winds at 60 mph as it headed toward the Texas Gulf Coast, the National Hurricane Center said.

The forecast track from the National Hurricane Center takes aim at the middle Texas coast. The cone, however, does extend to include parts of Southeast Texas and Matagorda Bay. Even a glancing blow from a strong Cat. 1 hurricane will have impacts on the coast and inland, with a heavy rain threat in play for the Houston area on Monday and Tuesday.  (Update in Spanish).

With Texas in Beryl's path, the KHOU 11 weather team is calling for Weather Impact Alert Days on Monday and Tuesday.

Hurricane and storm surge watches have been issued for portions of the western Gulf Coast from the Rio Grande north to Sargent. The center of Beryl is expected back out over the Gulf of Mexico over the next few hours.

Right now, the exact landfall on the Texas Gulf coast remains uncertain, but we will have a better understanding once Beryl this weekend. It is crucial to stay on top of this forecast through the weekend.

Beryl 10 p.m. statistics

With the 10 p.m. Thursday update, Beryl was a tropical storm with maximum sustained winds of 60 mph, moving west-northwest at 13 mph.

Live tropical tracker

Beryl forecast cone

Credit: KHOU 11

Beryl spaghetti models

Credit: KHOU

Be prepared


Watches and warnings

Hurricane Watch and Storm Surge watch in effect for Matagorda and Jackson counties

Credit: KHOU

Evacuations

A voluntary evacuation was called for residents in coastal areas of Matagorda County.

Record-setting Beryl

The 2024 Atlantic Hurricane Season was promised to be an active one, with Colorado State University and NOAA predicting well above normal numbers. In fact, the NOAA forecast for the season was the most aggressive forecast ever produced. Several factors including record warm sea-surface temperatures and a transition to La Nina by late summer were the driving factors in these aggressive forecasts. However, Hurricane Beryl is already shattering records before the peak of the season arrives. Meteorologist Pat Cavlin has a list of records the storm has already broken.

 

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