Wednesday, October 29, 2025

NO IKE DIKE ... WHAT WILL HAPEN TO HOUSTON-GALVESTON IF STRUCK BY CATEGORY 5 HURRICANE

By Howie Katz

 

(COMBO) This combination of pictures created on October 29, 2025 shows (top) this handout satellite image by Vantor taken on February 9, 2025 shows an overview of Black River, Jamaica, before Hurricane Melissa, and (bottom) this handout satellite image by Vantor taken on October 29, 2025 shows an overview of Black River, Jamaica, after Hurricane Melissa. Hurricane Melissa has brought never-before seen levels of devastation to Jamaica, the UN's resident coordinator in the country said October 29, 2025. Cubans waded through flooded, debris-strewn streets as Hurricane Melissa blasted across the Caribbean, leaving 30 dead or missing in Haiti and devastating swaths of Jamaica. (Photo by Satellite image ©2025 Vantor / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / Satellite image ©2025 Vantor" - HANDOUT - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS (Photo by -/Satellite image ©2025 Vantor/AFP via Getty Images)

Before and after photos show damage in Jamaica

 

Hurricane Melissa caused catastrophic damage to Jamaica and Cuba, leaving some areas unrecognizable. 

 

If a Category 5 Hurricane were to strike Houston-Galveston, it would cause similar damages, but on a much, much larger scale than that experienced in the Caribbean. That is because the Ike Dike proposed in 2009 by Texas A&M professor William Merrell has not been built.

 

Lead image for this article 

 
The Ike Dike was torpedoed by environmentalists who claimed that the proposed flood gates at Galveston would interfere with the migration of marine life, and by a Rice University group who proposed protecting the petro-chemical complex along the Houston ship channel instead.
 
The environmentalists disregarded the fact that the flood gates would be closed only during the approach of a hurricane and the Rice group disregarded the fact that the Ike Dike also would have protected their beloved petro-chemical complex. 
 
So far Houston-Galveston has not been hit by a Melissa strength hurricane, but how long can our luck last? When it does hit us, we will curse those damn environmentalists and Rice eggheads.  

2 comments:

bob walsh said...

That much wind and that much water is incredibly powerful. At least now they know it is coming. The great Galveston disaster happened well before that sort of thing was available.

Anonymous said...

Hurricane Harvey was bad enough. I worked my ass off after that storm. 16 hour days weren't uncommon. Now that we are both retired, we will evacuate much earlier.