Showing posts with label typhoon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label typhoon. Show all posts

Saturday, September 13, 2014

Tropical Storm Luis Philippines

Tropical Storm Luis Philippines, storm, bagyo, storm, typhoon

MANILA, Philippines - Tropical Storm Luis has entered the Philippines area of responsibility yesterday and is expected to pour heavy rains in north Luzon and other parts of the country.

At 5am Luis was a tropical depression then it turned to a tropical storm at 2 p.m. according to Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA).

The storm is expected to move west-northwest at 26 kph, and is to leave the Philippine area of responsibility on Tuesday.

PAGASA as has given the Public Storm Warning Signal No. 2 over Isabela and Cagayan provinces on Saturday afternoon as Tropical Storm Luis (international name Kalmaegi) gain strenght.

PAGASA said that Isabela and Cagayan provinces may experience wind strengths ranging from 61 to 100kph and heavy to intense rainfall within the next 24 hours.

Public Storm Warning Signal No. 1 has been raised in the following areas:

Catanduanes
Calayan
Babuyan Group of Islands
Apayao
Kalinga
Ifugao
Mt. Province
Nueva Viscaya
Quirino
Aurora

Visayas were issued a yellow or heavy rainfall warning in the following areas:

Aklan
Capiz
Iloilo
Antique
Negros
Siquijor
Biliran Island
Northern Leyte

Friday, November 8, 2013

Super Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) Philippines



The destruction of the Super Typhoon Haiyan is catastrophic and the Philippine government is yet to assess the total damage as most of the provinces that are hardest hit like Tacloban city are cut off, no information are coming out of the island as telecommunication are down.

The storm clouds stretch about 1,120 miles engulfing most of the country. The super typhoon first hit the eastern island of Samar at 4:30 a.m. Friday that knocked power and communication and caused massive flooding.

Haiyan has already weakened Saturday and was no longer a super typhoon it has sustained winds of 145 mph (230 kph). But the storm could return to super typhoon status Saturday. The center of Haiyan will land again Sunday morning near the Vietnamese cities of Da Nang and Hue.

Haiyan, named Yolanda in the Philippines, retained much of its force as it moved westward Friday with sustained winds of 295 kph (183 mph), which put it well above the 252 kph threshold for a Category 5 hurricane, the highest category on the Saffir--Simpson scale.

Super Typhoon Haiyan, Yolanda, Philippines, bagyo, typhoon, yolanda typhoon, UP Town Center in QC has collapsed, UP Town Center

In Manila, a portion of the ceiling at UP Town Center in QC has collapsed due to strong winds.

Sunday, August 25, 2013

14th cyclone develops near Surigao, named 'Nando'

MANILA, Philippines - The low pressure area near Surigao del Norte in Mindanao has intensified into a tropical depression and has been named "Nando," the state weather bureau said Sunday.

The Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) said that as of 10 a.m., the center of the tropical cyclone was estimated at 290 kilometers east of Borongan City.

"Nando" is the 14th cyclone to enter the Philippine Area of Responsibility this year and the fourth this August. The weather bureau expects at least five cyclones to hit the country this month.

It was packing maximum sustained winds of 45 kilometers per hour and was moving north northwest at a speed of 13 kph.

PAGASA said the cyclone will move up to Bicol area, particularly 270 kilometers east of Virac in Catanduanes by Monday morning and move near Aurora province by Tuesday.

The estimated rainfall amount within the cyclone's 300 kilometer diameter was five to 15 millimeters per hour or moderate to heavy.
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The weather bureau has not raised any public storm warning signals in areas near the storm's location.

The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said it has alerted its units in the areas near the cyclone's location.

The agency added that it has advised local government units in the affected provinces to order a preemptive evacuation when necessary.

source: philstar

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Heavy rains flooded Philippines, 7 dead

Philippines flood, typhoon, Maring, Tropical storm
Floodwaters submerged houses in BF Resort Village in Las Pinas
Philippines flood, typhoon, Maring, Tropical storm
Sucat Road in ParaƱaque
Philippines flood, typhoon, Maring, Tropical storm
Manila Flood
Philippines flood, typhoon, Maring, Tropical storm

Flood-battered residents of the Philippine capital Manila fled their homes or sat on rooftops Tuesday as relentless monsoon rains, which have killed seven people, submerged more than half of Manila.

Streets turned into rivers with water above two metres (7 feet) in some parts of the metro of 12 million people, displacing more than 130,000 people and forcing countless others to wait out the storm in or on their flooded homes.

"We have had nothing to eat, nothing to wear. A few people went to houses on higher ground, but most of us had nowhere to go," Dinah Claire Velasco, 44, a resident of a blue-collar coastal district on the outskirts of Manila told AFP.

"My children and other people were able to seek refuge on the second floor of my house but a lot of others had to just sit on their roofs... We're waiting for rescue, for help, even just food."

At least 60 percent of Manila was flooded on Tuesday morning, with some places enduring waters climbing as high as 2.1 metres, an official with the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority told the briefing.

In one part of the capital, 47.5 centimetres (18.7 inches) of rain fell in the 24 hours to Monday morning, according to Esperanza Cayanan, a meteorologist in charge of Manila for the state weather forecaster.

She said this was the same amount as which normally fell for all of August, already one of the wettest months of the year.

In a potentially serious escalation the Marikina River, a key waterway that cuts through eastern Manila, began to overflow on Tuesday afternoon, and 20,000 people close by were ordered to evacuate, the local mayor, Del de Guzman, told AFP.

These people were on top of the 131,000 people across the main island of Luzon, including Manila, that the government said were in evacuation centres or seeking shelter with relatives and friends.

Groups involved in the rescue effort said they were being overwhelmed.

"We are getting a lot of calls for rescue... we would really be hard pressed to rescue all of them," a Philippine Red Cross official told a government briefing on the floods, which was broadcast on national television.

While no one was reported killed in Manila, four more people were confirmed to have drowned in flooded farming provinces to the north, said Reynaldo Balido, a spokesman for the government's disaster management council.

This brought the confirmed death toll from two days of flooding across Luzon to seven.

The economic toll also started to grow, with the stock exchange, government offices and schools in Manila closed for a second consecutive day.

Many domestic flights at Manila's airport were cancelled, as were some international flights. Flooded roads to the airport were impassable.

The state weather agency warned the rain would continue into Tuesday evening, before easing on Wednesday.

The heavy rains were due to the seasonal monsoon being exacerbated by Tropical Storm Trami, known locally as Maring, which was hovering to the north of the Philippines.

Trami had been nearly stationary since Monday, according to the weather bureau.

The Southeast Asian archipelago endures about 20 major storms or typhoons annually, generally in the second half of the year and many of them deadly.

The extent of the flooding across Manila recalled memories of Tropical Storm Ketsana, which flooded 80 percent of the capital in 2009 and claimed more than 460 lives.

However Ketsana took most people in Manila by surprise, and residents as well as the government have taken many measures to be better prepared.

These include extensive social media alerts informing people about places to avoid and offering a platform to appeal for help.

One of the most important tools this week has been the #RescuePH hashtag on microblogging site Twitter.

"URGENT RESCUE: floods now reaching the second floor of houses there. #RescuePH" one post said, identifying the location of the district in Manila.

In Marikina, some 12,000 people have been housed in evacuation centers as Marikina River reached its critical level of 18 meters due to torrential rains brought by the storm-enhanced southwest monsoon.