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    Hurricane Irene vs. Hurricane Katrina: How They Stack Up

    As Hurricane Irene was bearing down on the East Coast late last week, many commentators warned of its destructive potential by invoking the memory of Hurricane Katrina.

    Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast six years ago today (Aug. 29), flooding nearly all of New Orleans in the process. The storm remains a potent cultural touchstone, serving as a reminder of nature's power — and the importance of planning properly for worst-case scenarios.

    Since Irene made landfall and was downgraded to a tropical storm over the weekend, we can begin to take its measure a little better. So how does Irene compare to Katrina?

    Birth date and place

    Irene: Meteorologists gave Irene its name Aug. 20. At that point, it was a tropical storm about 190 miles (306 kilometers) east of the Caribbean island of Dominica. In the early hours of Aug. 22, Irene graduated, becoming the first hurricane of the 2011 Atlantic season.

    Katrina: Katrina was named Aug. 24, 2005, when it was a tropical storm about 65 miles (105 km) east-southeast of Nassau in the Bahamas. Katrina became the fifth hurricane of the 2005 Atlantic season when it was upgraded the next day.

    Storm path

    Irene: Irene made landfall in Puerto Rico in the early morning of Aug. 22, then continued to move northwest. As it neared the U.S. East Coast, Irene banked heavily north, churning toward another landfall in North Carolina.

    The storm came aground at that state's Cape Lookout around 7:30 a.m. EDT Saturday (Aug. 28). Irene then kept moving northward in near-shore waters, hitting New York City around 9 a.m. EDT Sunday (Aug. 28) and New England a few hours later.

    Katrina: Katrina took a completely different route. The hurricane made landfall in southeast Florida on Aug. 25, then popped out into the Gulf of Mexico to the west. It churned westward through the Gulf for a while, gaining strength from the warm waters, then arced northward.

    Katrina made its Gulf landfall on the morning of Aug. 29 near Buras, La., about 50 miles (80 km) southeast of New Orleans. The storm kept weakening as it moved north, finally dying out around the Great Lakes region Aug. 31. [In Photos: Gulf Coast Damage from Hurricane Katrina]

    Size

    Irene: Irene's mammoth size made many forecasters nervous, as the storm had the potential to pummel huge swaths of the Eastern Seaboard with heavy rain, flooding and strong winds. At its largest, Irene measured about 600 miles (966 km) across, nearly as big as Texas.

    Katrina: The 2005 storm was also enormous, though apparently not quite as big as Irene. Katrina was about 400 miles (644 km) wide when it made landfall in Louisiana.

    For what it's worth, the biggest hurricane ever recorded was Typhoon Tip. (Hurricanes in the western Pacific Ocean are called typhoons.) The 1979 storm, which made landfall in southern Japan, was nearly 1,400 miles (2,253 km) wide at one point. That's almost half the size of the continental United States. [Hurricanes from Above: See Nature's Biggest Storms]

    Intensity

    Irene: Irene was a big, bad storm, but it could have been worse. The hurricane maxed out at Category 3, meaning its highest sustained wind speeds never topped 130 mph (209 kph). And Irene was not that powerful when it hit populated areas.

    Irene was still just a tropical storm, for example, when it passed over Puerto Rico. It was a Category 1 hurricane when it hit North Carolina, with maximum sustained wind speeds around 85 mph (137 kph). By the time it hit the Northeast, Irene had weakened to a tropical storm again, with top winds of about 60 mph (97 kph).

    Katrina: While Hurricane Irene covered more area, Katrina was more intense. In the Gulf of Mexico, Katrina grew into a Category 5 hurricane — the strongest storm there is. Katrina's maximum sustained winds reached speeds of around 173 mph (278 kph).

    But Katrina weakened as well before making landfall. When it hit Louisiana, the storm had been downgraded to a Category 3 hurricane and boasted max wind speeds around 127 mph (204 kph).

    Death and destruction

    Irene: While it's far too early to fully gauge Irene's impact, it's already clear the storm is far from another Katrina.

    Irene's storm surge likely maxed out around 4 to 8 feet (1.2 to 2.4 meters) along the East Coast, and it drenched huge swaths of land with heavy rain. As a result, many areas have suffered serious flooding, meaning Irene's economic toll will be considerable. Some experts say it is likely to be the 10th of the billion-dollar weather disasters of 2011.

    However, the destruction is nowhere near that of Katrina's. As of Sunday morning, news reports pegged Irene's cumulative death toll at 10 or so — not even close to the human toll Katrina exacted.

    Katrina: Katrina was an epic disaster. The hurricane flattened and flooded much of coastal Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana, generating storm surges of nearly 28 feet (8.5 meters) in some places.

    Some experts estimate Katrina caused $125 billion in damage, making it the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history. And the storm killed more than 1,800 people, the vast majority of them in Louisiana. Many of these people died after New Orleans' levee system failed and most of the city was flooded.

    Getting out of the way

    Irene: In general, most East Coast communities took Irene very seriously and started taking measures early. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, for example, issued a mandatory evacuation order for low-lying areas of the city at 2 p.m. EDT Friday (Aug. 26), nearly 48 hours before the hurricane hit the Big Apple.

    Other population centers along the coast were similarly cautious, and millions of people were told with plenty of time to spare to get out of Irene's path.

    Katrina: New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin issued a voluntary evacuation order on the evening of Aug. 27, 2005. As the storm bore down on his city, the mayor upped that to a mandatory order around 11 a.m. the next day — about 18 hours before the storm hit.

    The vast majority of New Orleans residents got out of harm's way. But some who were less mobile — seniors, disabled people and those without cars, for example — were left behind, and many of them died. Six years later, who should bear the brunt of blame for this evacuation failure is still being debated.

    This SPACE.com story was provided by OurAmazingPlanet, a sister site to LiveScience. You can follow Mike Wall, senior writer for SPACE.com, on Twitter: @michaeldwall.

     

    14 comments

    • gbe  •  8 mths ago
      Why is it the people from Mississippi who were hit very hard by Katrina put things back together and are just fine and those in New Orleans are still needing help after 6 years? So Nagen didn't help the more vunerable, like those in where the levee's failed. Was he ever brought up on criminal charges, Maybe he should, it is never to late.
    • BoaterBob  •  9 mths ago
      As usual, the news media exagerated part of the story of Katrina and ignored the non spectular but more significant. Katrina did not floos "ALL" of new Orleans. The part near the Mississippi River didn't flood. Also Katrina devistated the cities of Slidelle, La, Metairie, LA, Venice, LA, Biloxi, MS, Bay St. Louis, MS, Gulfport, MS, Chalmette, LA and many others. You know how bad Irene was. It was a cat 1. Katrina was a cat 3!!! I feel all the sympathy for New England that they showed for the gulf coast 6 years ago. You had a natural disaster, now you will have to deal with the man made disaster called FEMA! Good Luck!
    • Randy  •  9 mths ago
      THe only reason it got all the press was because jew york was involved the joplin didaster was hardly covered by national media
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 mths ago
      All this analysis. Next hurricane will have no peep of info compared to this.
    • john  •  9 mths ago
      N O most didn't leave just were not warned or were but to late then most were to poor to have trans out. Send in the Greyhounds while the school busses flooded. National guard not around gov and mayor both failures not ready for anything.
      Eastern USA get the heck out of here, board it up, stay inside, National guard ready, and emergency supplies moved near by. Yes they were different cat of storms but the east was ready N O asleep at the wheel.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 mths ago
      a comment to jennifer i was in gulfport Ms but i did leave before katrina hit alot needs to be restructured but goverment or governors wont do it as it cost money but you let some big shot builder come in and say hey i want to build a condons and it will bring money to the state and they jump on it like bees on honey if there is a profit to be made they are all for it if there is money to be spent they dont wan to talk about it
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 mths ago
      katrina was way worse than irene they didnt house people in a dome during irene people didnt go without food and they didnt need no fema help or buses to get them out and house them in fema trailers come on wake up east coast reporters irene was a child comparied to katrina the east coast didnt substaine hardly any damtage comparied to katrina and the lives that were lost during katrina was alot more than 6 during irene so mike wall get the facts right or find a caree that best suits you like flopping burgers at McDonalds that is something up ya line lmao
      • BoaterBob 9 mths ago
        Just remember that FEMA is the man made disaster which follows the natural ones. in 1906 San Fransisco was devistated by an earthquake. There was no FEMA. San Franscisco was restored in 4 years because they knew they had to do it themselves. Today, everyone waits for the government to do something. Result--it cost more, government contractors like Shaw Group get rich for being a pass through and people suffer longer than they would if they just did it themselves. Let's get rid of FEMA!
    • Andrew C  •  9 mths ago
      You should not compair two situations hardly realated; why all this hype over an almost non-issue ? A little heavy rain, some wind, even the wind was over-reported; why the hype ? Contril, teach the sheep to do what their told. Bhaaa During Katerina troops did not hand-out food, they hurded the people into stadiums, shot those that wanted to leave..
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 mths ago
      Comparison? None.
    • JenniferM  •  9 mths ago
      I grew up outside of Pensacola, Fl and we were hit almost every year, sometimes many times. California gets mudslides and Earthquakes yearly. As a New Orleans Katrina evacuee, I find it funny that no one is saying that any of these places or NY should not be rebuilt.
      • Bayou Rat 9 mths ago
        Very good point I'm from Buras and everybody was saying that it wasn't worth rebuilding. I say F them because like you said they do not say the same thing when other places get damaged.
    • RaquelW  •  9 mths ago
      In the words of Kanya West: "Imma let you finish Irene, but Katrina was the best hurricane of all time!"
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 mths ago
      The bulk of the number of people that perished in Irene could have been on any given day and not in a hurricane! The majority were vehicular accidents. The next group were morons that were swimming, boarding, camping and cutting firewood during a hurricane. 3-4 actually died in their homes by fallen trees or fire that they could not avoid.
    • not  •  9 mths ago
      The Weather Channel's big profits. Heart attacks, strokes, storm-related deaths: My heartfelt condolences. But you idiots on the tube made it sound worse than Katrina. Go get yourselves a real job. And, definitely quit your day job, too.
    • Catharin  •  8 mths ago
      As a NOLA evacuee, I have no idea where the national media was even getting the slightest hint that Irene would be anything like Katrina. Irene was a tropical storm by the time it hit New York. Katrina was a Category 3 hurricane when it made landfall and it was one of the biggest, nastiest, strongest storms recorded at that time, and remains among the costliest and deadliest in history, as this article clearly states.

      I grew up in and now live in N.C. and everybody here knows that when storms run into our Outer Banks it takes much of the fight out of the hurricane. That is why they're called BARRIER ISLANDS. They protect the interior coastline while taking it on the chin. Anybody who's spent a few years following storms knows that once they hit land, they weaken. There was never any real danger of Irene actually hitting NY as a powerful hurricane, not as long as it was pointed at North Carolina's beaches first.

      I really feel like people panicked because of the over-coverage and hyping that Irene would destroy New York. It's not New Englanders' fault, they don't get hurricanes frequently and don't know how to react to them the way people from places like Florida and the Carolinas do. They also don't have our in-built "B.S. meter" when it comes to judging news coverage of hurricanes. As a media professional and a survivor of many, many hurricanes, I know just how crazy the build-up can get. But really, I slept through Irene. I knew it wasn't anything that my area of N.C. needed to fear.

      Don't get me wrong, I feel terrible for those who've lost their lives and those who've lost their homes in the flooding, but no, it's not Katrina. There aren't a million people displaced. There aren't people calling to let the affected cities die or lambasting the decision to build them near water in the first place. There aren't thousands of homeless men, women and children holed up in a stinking sports stadium with no water, food or air conditioning in 100-degree temperatures. At worst there are some people left homeless and a lot more whining about being unable to charge their iPhones during a power outage.

      Katrina was the grossest failure of government in my lifetime and every last one of us ought to be on our knees that it won't happen again. I agree with the previous poster, there is absolutely no comparison between these two storms.
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