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Home » Hurricane Melissa: a visual guide to Jamaica’s strongest storm since 1851 | Hurricane Melissa
Climate Commitments

Hurricane Melissa: a visual guide to Jamaica’s strongest storm since 1851 | Hurricane Melissa

omc_adminBy omc_adminOctober 28, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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Hurricane Melissa has made landfall in Jamaica as a catastrophic category 5 storm, the strongest to lash the island since record-keeping began in 1851.

The slow-moving giant hit the island on Tuesday afternoon and is expected to linger, moving diagonally through it until heading on to slam into Cuba, with impacts also expected in Haiti and the Bahamas.

How intense is the storm?

Melissa is particularly dangerous as it intensified extremely quickly and is moving at the sluggish speed of a person running, meaning it will hover over Jamaica for longer, compounding the damage.

The storm’s winds escalated from 70mph to 140mph (225km/h) in just a day, one of the fastest intensifications on record in the Atlantic Ocean.

The US air force flies through Hurricane Melissa
Flying above the thick clouds of Hurricane Melissa

Category 5 is the highest on the Saffir-Simpson scale, with sustained winds exceeding 157mph.

This system is worse still, with maximum sustained winds of 180mph (280km/h). It is moving north-northeast at 7mph, according to the US National Hurricane Center in Miami.

Map showing predicted track of Melissa over Jamaica and Cuba

How prepared is Jamaica for a storm like this?

Forecasters warn that Jamaica faces catastrophic flash flooding and numerous landslides. Airports have been shut down and highway toll barriers have been lifted to allow everyone who needs to evacuate to move as easily and as fast as possible.

The small country has limited resources and is still repairing damage caused by Hurricane Beryl, which brought historic levels of destruction last year.

“There is no infrastructure in the region that can withstand a category 5,” the prime minister, Andrew Holness, said. “The question now is the speed of recovery. That’s the challenge.”

A life-threatening storm surge of up to 4 metres (13ft) is expected across southern Jamaica, with officials concerned about damage to hospitals along the coastline.

How storm surges work
How storm surges work

The aftermath could have significant future impact – Jamaica depends on tourism for about a third of its annual revenue.

How are people sheltering?

Tens of thousands of Jamaica’s 2.8 million population could be displaced. Holness has said there are 850 shelters across the island, enough for more than 20,000 people.

A man watches the coastline in Kingston as Hurricane Melissa closes in. Photograph: Matias Delacroix/AP

But Colin Bogle, a Mercy Corps adviser based near Kingston, said most families have decided to shelter in their homes, despite the government ordering evacuations in flood-prone communities.

“Many have never experienced anything like this before, and the uncertainty is frightening,” he said. “There is profound fear of losing homes and livelihoods, of injury and of displacement.”

Satellite images of Hurricane Melissa over the Caribbean Sea
Satellite images of Hurricane Melissa over the Caribbean Sea

What is the impact of the climate crisis?

The extraordinary intensification of Hurricane Melissa is likely to be a symptom of the rapid heating of the world’s oceans.

Melissa is the fourth storm in the Atlantic this year to undergo rapid intensification of its wind speed and power. This sort of intensification has been linked to the human-caused climate crisis, which is causing oceans to become hotter.

Researchers at Climate Central, a nonprofit organisation that analyses climate science, found that during Melissa’s rapid intensification the storm drifted over exceptionally warm ocean waters that were 1.4C hotter than average. These conditions were made up to 700 times more likely because of the climate crisis, the organisation said.

How warm seas contribute to hurricane frequency and strength
How warm seas contribute to hurricane frequency and strength

Last year, the world’s oceans were the warmest on record, continuing a recent trend of record-breaking marine heat.



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