
The latest on tropical storm Debby and the Maritimes
CTV
Tropical storm Debby strengthened over the last 24 hours.
Tropical storm Debby strengthened over the last 24 hours. Maximum sustained winds near the centre of the storm were near 95 km/h on Wednesday, up from 65 km/h on Tuesday.
The storm continues to churn just off the coastline of South Carolina. It is expected to make a landfall on the coast late Wednesday night or early Thursday. Once on land, it is forecast to weaken.
Tropical storm force winds are impacting parts of the South Carolina coastline. Additional rain amounts for some areas could be as much as another 75-to-225 mm. The slow-moving storm has made it a prolific rain producer. Summerville, SC, received 432 mm of rain from Saturday through Tuesday morning.
Debby will remain over South Carolina for much of Thursday. On Friday the storm will speed northward as it becomes a non-tropical area of low pressure and combines with a separate weather system from the west. The combined weather system then crosses Atlantic Canada on the weekend.
The heaviest rain with the system as it moves northward is expected along and just to the west of its track. Currently that brings a band of heavy rain through the eastern U.S. and into the St. Lawrence River Valley. The Maritimes are just to the east of that heavy rainfall.
