On the 16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, the smaller but more powerful Hurricane Ida made landfall in Louisiana.1 After the Category 4 storm knocked out power across New Orleans and flattened a landmark building known as Louis Armstrong’s second home, the National Weather Service warned that parts of New Orleans and Baton Rouge could be without electricity for weeks, and the Yale Climate Connections group projected that the storm would disrupt dozens of petrochemical sites and at least three ports that export up to 70 percent of the country’s grain.
Weekly Review
Weekly Review
Weekly Review
On the 16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, the smaller but more powerful Hurricane Ida made landfall in Louisiana.1 After the Category 4 storm knocked out power across New Orleans and flattened a landmark building known as Louis Armstrong’s second home, the National Weather Service warned that parts of New Orleans and Baton Rouge could be without electricity for weeks, and the Yale Climate Connections group projected that the storm would disrupt dozens of petrochemical sites and at least three ports that export up to 70 percent of the country’s grain.