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11:15 pm, Sep 17, 2025
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Tropical Storm Gabrielle Forecast Discussion Number 3

Virgin Islands News

Issued at 500 PM AST Wed Sep 17 2025

000
WTNT42 KNHC 172044
TCDAT2
 
Tropical Storm Gabrielle Discussion Number   3
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL       AL072025
Issued by the NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
500 PM AST Wed Sep 17 2025
 
The biggest change with Gabrielle today has been that the center 
has re-formed farther to the north compared with the previous 
advisory, similar to earlier model forecasts.  While satellite 
imagery continues to indicate an elongated circulation with 
multiple embedded swirls, it has become better defined than this 
morning, and we have continued to make the center position on the 
advisory a mean of those swirls. A second scatterometer pass that 
intersected the northern semicircle of the storm after the 15Z 
advisory did show a large area of 40-45 kt winds. Therefore, the 
initial intensity has been increased to 45 knots, even though the 
system does not appear appreciably more organized.
 
The first part of the track forecast has been shifted to the north 
based on the recent center re-formation.  Gabrielle is moving 
northwestward now, and a west-northwestward to northwestward track 
is anticipated for the next few days due to steering from the 
subtropical ridge.  The fundamental forecast question for both 
track and intensity is related to the wind shear Gabrielle will 
experience and the structural change.  Little intensity change is 
shown for the next couple of days while the storm remains in a 
high-shear but high SST/instability environment.  There actually 
appears to be good consensus that the shear will relax after Friday, 
but there are significant model differences on how much. This leads 
to a considerable amount of track and intensity spread as the 
forecast progresses into the weekend.  Generally the models that 
relax the shear more substantially, to around 10 knots or less, show 
more intensification and a track to the right of model consensus.  
Since the NHC intensity forecast is a bit above the model average 
(similar to the last prediction), we favor a track forecast to the 
right of the model blend, more consistent with the HCCA corrected 
consensus, Google Deep Mind ensemble, and ECMWF ensemble.   

Overall, forecast confidence remains relatively low. Based on the 
recent trends, this system should pass well east and north of the 
Windward and Leeward Islands, but interests in Bermuda should 
monitor forecasts during the next several days. 
 
FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS
 
INIT  17/2100Z 19.4N  48.0W   45 KT  50 MPH
 12H  18/0600Z 20.6N  49.7W   45 KT  50 MPH
 24H  18/1800Z 21.7N  51.6W   45 KT  50 MPH
 36H  19/0600Z 22.7N  53.5W   45 KT  50 MPH
 48H  19/1800Z 23.5N  55.5W   45 KT  50 MPH
 60H  20/0600Z 24.7N  57.4W   50 KT  60 MPH
 72H  20/1800Z 26.2N  59.0W   55 KT  65 MPH
 96H  21/1800Z 29.0N  62.0W   65 KT  75 MPH
120H  22/1800Z 32.0N  62.5W   75 KT  85 MPH
 
$$
Forecaster Lamers/Blake

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Power was out for much of St. Thomas early to mid-Wednesday, stretching from about 1 a.m. until nearly 10 a.m. for customers on several feeders, the latest in a string of blackouts tied to limited generation capacity at the Randolph Harley Power Plant.
With power restored by noon, Virgin Islands Water and Power Authority CEO Karl Knight said there was finally some better news: a long-dormant generating unit had been repaired and returned to service, adding 20 megawatts of capacity and giving WAPA what he described as “more than adequate generation” to meet demand.
Knight explained that the recent outages stem from a design flaw in Phase II of the Wartsila power units. The four engines, each rated at nine megawatts, are linked by shared systems. When a compressed air line failed last week, one unit tripped and automatically shut down the others. “They function individually, but there are common systems that tie them together, and in this case one failure took out all four,” Knight said. “That’s something we are now working with Wärtsilä to correct, so they operate completely independent of each other.”
The loss of those units left the utility scrambling to keep up with demand and forced rotational outages across St. Thomas-St. John, that began Sept. 11, when WAPA issued a series of alerts warning that feeders 7B, 8A, 8B, 9C, 6A and others would be cycled off until additional generation came online. Wednesday, WAPA confirmed that Unit 27, one of the older Harley plant generators that had been offline for months due to deferred maintenance, was restored after a rebuild of its fuel pumps and other key components.
“Unit 27 isn’t one of the ones slated for retirement, and getting it back was critical,” Knight said in a call with the Source. “It strengthens our base. With all available units except Unit 23 now online, we have more than adequate capacity.” He added that customers should expect more stability beginning Wednesday evening, though he cautioned that reliability also depends on the success of ongoing maintenance and system upgrades.
WAPA has maintained that the outages in recent weeks were necessary to keep the grid stable, especially during peak hours.
Knight, after a briefing with his team Wednesday, said progress is being made. “We’ve been running really thin on generation, but with this repair, we are in a much better position than we were last week,” he said.

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