Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
A man stands next to a partially destroyed building
A man stands next to a business destroyed by Hurricane Beryl in Clifton, Union Island, St Vincent and the Grenadines. Photograph: Lucanus Ollivierre/AP
A man stands next to a business destroyed by Hurricane Beryl in Clifton, Union Island, St Vincent and the Grenadines. Photograph: Lucanus Ollivierre/AP

Weather tracker: Hurricane Beryl causes devastation across Caribbean

Daniel Harris (MetDesk)

Beryl is earliest category 5 Atlantic hurricane in about 100 years of record keeping

Hurricane Beryl has caused devastation across a number of Caribbean islands over the past few days, becoming the earliest category 5 Atlantic hurricane in about 100 years of record keeping.

With maximum sustained winds of 165mph, it was upgraded to a category 5 hurricane on 2 July, which also made it the strongest Atlantic hurricane in that month, beating 2005’s Hurricane Emily, which recorded maximum sustained winds of 160mph.

The first places to be badly affected by Hurricane Beryl were Grenada and St Vincent and the Grenadines as it struck as a category 4 storm on Monday with maximum sustained winds of 140mph.

The destruction caused by these winds resulted in the deaths of four people, three of which occurred in Grenada. Some of its smaller islands such as Carriacou and Petite Martinique were more or less flattened with 98% of buildings on Carriacou damaged. Venezuela also had significant flooding, resulting in a further three deaths.

After passing through the Windward Islands, Beryl continued to march westwards during Tuesday before approaching Jamaica on Wednesday afternoon. The eye of the storm then tracked just to the south of Jamaica on Wednesday night bringing strong category 4 hurricane winds of 130mph across the southern part of the island resulting in hundreds of thousands of homes losing power.

Along with the winds, Beryl also brought hours of heavy rain across the island, causing significant flooding and damaging the crops of thousands of farmers. Hurricane Beryl is expected to continue to cause disruption as it moves across Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula on Friday.

Meanwhile in north-east India and Bangladesh flash flooding after torrential rains caused rivers to surge. Three million people have been affected, with nine deaths reported. Disaster authorities in India’s north-eastern state of Assam said eight people died on Thursday as heavy rain in the state of Arunachal Pradesh travelled downstream resulting in 2,800 villages being submerged.

Low-lying Bangladesh was also affected, with floods affecting 1.8 million across the country as 100mm of rain fell within the first three days of July in the country’s capital, Dhaka. The disaster management agency warned that waters would continue to rise through the rest of this week as the monsoon season continues.

More on this story

More on this story

  • Three dead and millions without power as Tropical Storm Beryl hits Texas

  • Hurricane Beryl: Britons join global aid effort amid Caribbean devastation

  • Hurricane Beryl makes landfall in Mexico as category 2 storm and expected to reach Texas

  • The Guardian view on Hurricane Beryl: the west can’t sit this out

  • Hurricane Beryl barrels through Cayman Islands after battering Jamaica

  • Hurricane Beryl hits Jamaica after leaving ‘Armageddon-like’ trail in Grenada

  • ‘Please send help’: Caribbean reels from Hurricane Beryl devastation

  • Four dead as Hurricane Beryl wreaks havoc across Caribbean

  • Why Hurricane Beryl foretells a scary storm season

  • Wind, rain and floods as Hurricane Beryl tears through Caribbean – video

Most viewed

Most viewed