Weaker Ida drenches U.S. Gulf Coast
By Kelli Dugan
MOBILE, Alabama (Reuters) - Tropical Storm Ida weakened further and was losing speed on Tuesday as it drenched the U.S. Gulf Coast and oil installations, shutting down almost 30 percent of Gulf energy production.
Once a Category 2 hurricane, Ida became less threatening as its top sustained winds fell to near 60 miles an hour (95 kph), the U.S. National Hurricane Centre said in a 1 a.m. EST (6:00 a.m. British time) advisory.
The storm had also slowed down, with its Centre expected to cross the U.S. Gulf Coast near Mobile, Alabama, later on Tuesday, the hurricane Centre said.
Forecasters said Ida would continue weakening as it moved over cooler waters before landfall and then lose strength more quickly as it moved inland, turning east over northern Florida.
A U.S. Coast Guard helicopter plucked two workers from a storm-damaged oil rig south of New Orleans. Ida is blamed for 124 flood and mudslide deaths in El Salvador.
The Coast Guard closed the Port of Mobile, halting traffic on Mobile Bay, and authorities closed schools and government offices in coastal counties in Alabama and Florida, telling residents of flood-prone areas and mobile homes to evacuate.
An overnight curfew was issued for part of the Alabama coast.
Ida, which was downgraded from a hurricane to a tropical storm earlier on Monday, posed the first real storm threat of the 2009 Atlantic hurricane season to Gulf of Mexico oil and natural gas production, and forced some companies to shut down off-shore platforms and evacuate personnel. Continued...



