MIAMI, Nov 9 ― Tropical Storm Nicole gained strength yesterday as it churned toward the Bahamas on track for Florida's Atlantic coast, where a hurricane warning was posted for nearly 250 miles of shoreline with millions of residents warned to hunker down and prepare.

Nicole, packing maximum sustained winds of 60 miles per hour (95km per hour), will likely grow into a hurricane today around the Bahamas before making US landfall along Florida's east coast north of Miami tonight or early Thursday, forecasters said.

A hurricane warning was posted for Grand Bahama Island, Bimini, the Berry Islands and the Abacos in the northwestern corner of the West Indies archipelago nation, the Miami-based National Hurricane Center (NHC) said.

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A 240-mile expanse of Florida's Atlantic shoreline from Boca Raton north to around Flagler Beach was likewise placed under a hurricane warning.

That stretch includes Nasa's Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral, where a towering new US$14 billion (RM66.3 billion) moon rocket was rolled out to its launch pad last week for a flight that had been planned for next Monday.

Although the rocket was built to withstand exposure to hurricane-force winds up to 85 mph, the flight is expected to be postponed.

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The NHC also issued storm-surge advisories for the northwest Bahamas and much of Florida's Atlantic coast, warning that Nicole's winds could drive treacherous waves of surf into low-lying areas well beyond the shoreline.

“This is a life-threatening situation,” the NHC's latest bulletin said.

Storm-surge flooding devastated wide swaths of Florida's Gulf Coast when Hurricane Ian crashed ashore there six weeks ago, causing an estimated $60 billion in damage and killing more than 140 people.

On Monday, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency for 34 counties along the state's Eastern seaboard, urging residents and businesses to take precautions necessary to protect life and property.

“While this storm does not, at this time, appear that it will become much stronger, I urge all Floridians to be prepared and to listen to announcements from local emergency management officials,” DeSantis said in statement.

By yesterday, forecasters made clear that Nicole was a formidable tropical cyclone continuing to gather strength, with tropical storm-force winds extending up to 300 miles from its center.

Some 18 million Floridians were estimated to reside within areas covered under NHC-issued watches and warnings yesterday.

Palm Beach County Mayor Robert Weinroth warned that heavy rains from the storm could contribute to urban flooding, which he said “will be worse during high tide, with a 2- to 4-foot storm surge possible.”

He urged residents to stock up on food and supplies and to help look after elderly neighbors and others living alone, adding that emergency shelters would open this morning.

On its forecast track, the Nicole's center was expected to approach the northwest Bahamas last night and move near or over the islands on Wednesday before it approaches Florida's coast later in the day.

Residents were preparing for the storm yesterday on the Bahamian islands of Abaco and Grand Bahama, which were battered by Hurricane Dorian three years ago.

Holmes Rolle, 54, of West Grand Bahama said he does not plan to leave his home or shutter the windows.

“I just believe that, at this time and with the type of storm, it just calls for some winds and plenty rain,” Rolle said in a telephone interview.

“It's going to take more than a Category 1 hurricane or so to really move stuff and have them flying around.”

Forecasters said Nicole would likely sweep across central and northern Florida into southern Georgia on Thursday. ― Reuters