This Article is From May 31, 2015

Hurricane Andres Strengthens Off Mexican Coast

Hurricane Andres Strengthens Off Mexican Coast

File Photo: A view of a street in Cabo San Lucas in Mexico after it was hit by Hurricane Odile. (Agence France Presse)

Mexico City: Andres, the first storm of the Pacific season, strengthened today to a Category Two hurricane as it churned hundreds of kilometers off the coast of Mexico, the National Weather Service said.

The storm could cause heavy rain across southern Mexico, but was some 1,125 kilometers (700 miles) from the Baja California beach resort of Los Cabos, the Mexican agency said in a report.

Andres reached the Category Two status on a scale of five, and was moving northwest at 10 kilometers (six miles) per hour with maximum sustained winds of 165 kph (102 miles per hour).

"Strong to very strong rains" was possible in Guerrero, Michoacan and Jalisco states, according to the weather service, which recommended that seafaring vessels "take precaution."

The storm will move 35 kilometers (22 miles) closer to Colima state overnight and then begin moving away from the Mexican coast, said the report, issued at 1500 GMT.

The weather service forecast that Andres would downgrade to a tropical storm on Tuesday some 1,350 kilometers (840 miles) from Colima.

The Pacific hurricane season began on May 15 and runs through November 30.

Last year's season was the most active since 1992, with 20 recorded storms, of which 14 went on to become hurricanes.

The most damaging was Hurricane Odile, which killed six people and caused millions of dollars' worth of damage in September in Los Cabos.
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