Hurricane Ignacio at peak strength, moves closer to Hawaii

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AP Honolulu (US)
Last Updated : Aug 31 2015 | 2:57 AM IST
The Big Island and Maui are under a tropical storm watch as a Category 4 hurricane approaches Hawaii.
The current forecast has Hurricane Ignacio passing northeast of the Big Island today and north of Maui tomorrow. It's possible that the storm will still be at hurricane strength during that time, the Maui News reported.
Stormy weather could hit the Big Island and Maui today, the Central Pacific Hurricane Centre reported.
Hurricane Ignacio is 400 miles (640 kilometres) east of Hilo and has sustained winds of 130 mph (209 kph), said Anthony Reynes, a meteorologist with the Central Pacific Hurricane Centre.
"Right now, the current track, we're not expecting the hurricane to make a direct hit on the Big Island," Reynes said. "Mainly the impacts are going to be very high surf and some strong wind gusts over the coastal waters."
Maui Mayor Alan Arakawa and Hawaii Gov David Ige have signed emergency proclamations as the islands prepare for high winds, heavy rain and ocean swells.
Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell said at a news conference yesterday that city officials are preparing to prevent more sewage spills in case the storm touches Oahu, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported.
A million gallons (3.8 million litres) of treated but not yet disinfected wastewater spilled from the East Honolulu Wastewater Treatment plant, closing Sandy Beach and its surroundings on Thursday. On Monday, 400,000 gallons (1.5 million litres) of wastewater spilled in Ala Moana Beach Park after heavy rains associated with Tropical Storm Kilo inundated the system.
The cause of the Ala Moana Beach Park spill was traced to city sewer pumping stations that were offline because of construction, the Star-Advertiser reported. Honolulu officials confirmed that all stations are online, and workers have positioned extra pumps in case of flooding.
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First Published: Aug 31 2015 | 2:57 AM IST

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