At least 44 people are confirmed dead and almost 4 million are without power on Saturday, after strong winds and torrential rain from Hurricane Helene wreaked unprecedented havoc across large swathes of the south-eastern United States.
Historic flooding continued over parts of the southern Appalachians on Saturday, as first responders worked to reach stranded communities in trying conditions while local authorities began to assess the scale of the damage and displacement.
Helene made landfall late on Thursday in Florida’s Big Bend region as a category 4 hurricane, pummeling the peninsula with winds of 140mph (225km/h). It weakened into a tropical storm, moving quickly through Georgia, the Carolinas and Tennessee, uprooting trees, blowing roofs off homes, sweeping away cars, testing dams and flooding rivers – leaving entire communities without escape as landslides and flooding struck.
A combination of strong winds, heavy rain, flooding and tornadoes that followed in the path of Helene have likely caused billions of dollars in damage, with entire downtowns, highways, and large numbers of homes and businesses ruined.
The deaths occurred in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia, and include firefighters, a woman and her one-month-old twins, and an 89-year-old woman whose house was struck by a falling tree.
Just over a million homes and businesses remained without power in South Carolina on Saturday, with more than 700,000 also in the dark across Georgia and North Carolina, according to the latest data from PowerOutage. Florida and Ohio are also badly affected, as well as tens of thousands of people in Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee.
The threat of further deaths and destruction is ongoing but Helene has weakened to a post-tropical cyclone with the risk of additional heavy rainfall waning as it moves north, according to the National Hurricane Center.
Scores of dramatic water evacuations and rescues were carried out on Friday as unprecedented heavy rain strained dams and rivers.
In North Carolina, a lake featured in the movie Dirty Dancing overtopped a dam and surrounding neighborhoods were evacuated as a precaution. Parts of western North Carolina were largely cut off by landslides and flooding that forced the closure of major roads.
In rural Unicoi county in east Tennessee, dozens of patients and staff were rescued by helicopter from the roof of a hospital that was surrounded by water from a flooded river.
Meanwhile in Mexico, at least eight people were confirmed dead on Friday after Tropical Storm John made its second landfall and flooded the southern resort city of Acapulco – which still hasn’t recovered from Hurricane Otis last October.
John made landfall as a category 3 hurricane farther north in the state of Michoacán, weakening inland, and then gathering strength again over the ocean before making landfall in Acapulco. Local authorities pleaded for help from boat owners after a year’s worth of rain that pounded the coastal mountains triggered landslides and severe flooding in Acapulco and elsewhere.
Global heating, which is driven by burning fossil fuels, is supercharging tropical storms by generating conditions that enable rapid intensification, sometimes within hours, and bring a heightened risk of flooding.
Atlantic storms have become deadlier as the planet warms – and are disproportionately killing people of color in the US, according to one landmark study. About 20,000 excess deaths – the numbers of observed rather than expected deaths – occurred in the immediate aftermath of 179 named storms and hurricanes which struck the US mainland between 1988 and 2019.
The National Hurricane Center is currently monitoring two more storms that are moving through the Atlantic – Tropical Storm Joyce and Hurricane Issac, which is gathering strength.