Hurricane Beryl live updates: Storm makes landfall again in Mexico. Is Texas next?

Hurricane Beryl made landfall on Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula on Friday morning after it ripped through Jamaica and the Caribbean earlier this week, leaving 11 dead, as southern Texas and the Gulf Coast brace for its arrival this weekend.

Beryl weakened to a Category 1 storm as of late Friday morning, according to Mexico's National Meteorological Service. The storm is continuing to weaken as it moves further inland over the northeastern Yucatan Peninsula but can undergo slow re-intensification once it moves over the Gulf of Mexico, according to the National Weather Service.

The Yucatan's coastline, stretching from Cancun to Puerto Allen, and the island of Cozumel were under a hurricane warning on Friday morning, according to the National Hurricane Center. A hurricane watch was also issued for the coast between Cancun and Cabo Catoche, on the peninsula's northern tip.

By 10 a.m. local time, the storm was 15 miles northwest of Tulum, a popular tourist destination, and around 680 miles from Brownsville, Texas, the center said. As it moved inland over Mexico, it carried maximum sustained winds of 85 mph.

"Life-threatening" conditions, including hurricane-force winds, a dangerous storm surge, and heavy rainfall are expected to hit Mexico's top tourist destination as the hurricane makes landfall, according to the center. People in the area are advised to shelter in place.

The storm could dump up to 10 inches of rain on parts of the Yucatan, increasing the risk of flash flooding, according to the hurricane center.

Beryl could also trigger strong rip currents on beaches throughout the gulf coast, the center said.

Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula braced as Hurricane Beryl made landfall on Friday.
Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula braced as Hurricane Beryl made landfall on Friday.

More: Hurricane Beryl tracker: See projected path, spaghetti models of storm as it hits Mexico

Hurricane Beryl expected to move over southern Texas

The storm will likely move over southern Texas this weekend, forecasters warn.

"Today and Saturday will be our calm before the storm," the National Weather Service in Corpus Christi wrote in an advisory on Friday.

The effects of the hurricane are expected to flare up on Friday evening, including a high risk of rip currents, the center said. By Saturday, the coast could see some minor flooding as some showers begin ahead of the hurricane's arrival.

Residents of the area should make "preparedness plans," forecasters said.

Multiple large urban areas in Texas, including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, lie in the storm's broad path of projection, according to the National Weather Service's Friday morning advisory.

In Houston, the weather service warned that locally heavy rainfall is the "primary severe weather threat" as Beryl makes landfall near or on the South Texas coast Sunday night or early Monday and works its way generally northwestward into Wednesday.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott directed the state's Division of Emergency Management to increase its readiness level for the storm on Thursday.

"As Texans and visitors around the south coastal areas begin to celebrate our nation's Independence Day, I urge them to make an emergency plan, review hurricane evacuation routes, and continue to monitor weather conditions to ensure the safety of themselves and their loved ones," he wrote in a news release.

Forecasters are uncertain if the storm will reach Austin, National Weather Service Meteorologist Mack Morris told the Austin American-Statesman, part of the USA TODAY Network, on Thursday. By the time the storm hits Texas, it could be downgraded to a Category 1 storm, he said.

According to AccuWeather, Beryl could weaken to become a tropical storm later on Friday and into Saturday before it strengthens into a hurricane again. It may make landfall again near the Texas-Mexico border late Sunday or early Monday, meteorologists predicted.

National Hurricane Center Director Michael Brennan warned Texans to keep checking forecasts through the holiday weekend. If Beryl affects the western Gulf of Mexico as a tropical storm, "it could be during the day Saturday," he said.

Live cam: Hurricane Beryl

More: Sheryl Lee Ralph shelters in Jamaica ahead of Hurricane Beryl: 'Stay inside'

Some flights canceled in Cancun as Hurricane Beryl approaches

More than 1,170 temporary shelters were installed throughout the Yucatan Peninsula in anticipation of the storm, according to a news release on Thursday from the state's government. The Tulum International Airport shut down on Thursday, and will remain closed until Sunday. Cancun Airport remained operational, but many flights were canceled.

Beryl strengthened to become the earliest Category 5 storm on record earlier this week. It wreaked widespread devastation as it passed over the Caribbean Sea.

On Thursday, the storm barreled through Grand Cayman, the largest of the Cayman islands. It touched down in Jamaica the day before as a Category 4 hurricane, triggering power outages, destroying structures, and forcing hundreds into emergency shelters, as of Wednesday evening.

Officials updated the storm's death toll to 11 on Thursday, but said news of more deaths would likely come in as communications were restored.

Watch: Record-breaking Hurricane Beryl charges west toward Jamaica

Task force deployed as U.S. embassy closes

The U.S. Embassy in Mexico will shutter its doors on Friday in response to the hurricane, with plans to reopen on Monday.

Mexico's government established a "prevention zone" across the part of the Yucatan's coastline under hurricane warning. Dozens of rivers and dams throughout the affected areas are being monitored by officials, according to a news release on Wednesday.

A task force of 8,535 response elements and 727 vehicles will also be deployed, Tania Patricia Ramírez Gutiérrez, the director of Mexico's National Communication Center, said in the news release.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador advised people on X to seek high altitudes and take shelter.

"Let us not hesitate, material things can be recovered," he wrote. "The most important thing is life."

Jamaica, Caribbean islands assess damage, deaths from Hurricane Beryl

Hurricane Beryl's arrival in Mexico comes after it left widescale destruction on its path through the Caribbean.

The storm caused the deaths of at least 11 people in Jamaica, Grenada, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and northern Venezuela.

Jamaica confirmed two deaths in the hurricane, Prime Minister Andrew Holness told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in an interview on Thursday. One body had not been recovered, Holness said.

"The report is that that person was swept out to sea, but we're still seeking to see if we could recover the body," he said.

One person in the parish of Hanover was killed by a downed tree, Richard Thompson, deputy director general of Jamaica's Office of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management, said.

Holness said officials were working to assess the damage sustained by the island. "We have now transitioned from the preparedness phase into the recovery phase," he said.

More than 90% of all homes and buildings on three islands within the Grenadine Island chain were destroyed by the hurricane when it tore through earlier this week, the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency said on Wednesday. St. Vincent and the Grenadines "bore the brunt of Hurricane Beryl," said Elizabeth Riley, the disaster management agency's executive director.

St. Vincent and the Grenadines could be at risk of food shortages after the storm destroyed half of the island's plantain and banana crops, Permanent Agriculture Ministry Secretary Nerissa Gittens-McMillan said.

Grenada Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell called the level of destruction in the islands of Carriacou and Petite Martinique "almost Armageddon-like" in a news conference on Tuesday.

"There's really nothing that can prepare you to see this level of destruction," he said.

Contributing: Reuters

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Hurricane Beryl live updates: Landfall in Mexico. Is Texas next?