MANILA, Philippines–Typhoon “Labuyo” has intensified and - TopicsExpress



          

MANILA, Philippines–Typhoon “Labuyo” has intensified and continued to move closer to southern Isabela-northern Aurora Area, the state weather bureau said Sunday. The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) raised storm warning signal no. 3 in the following areas: Cagayan Isabela Aurora Pollillo Island Nueva Ecija Nueva Vizcaya Benguet Quirino Abra Ifugao Mt. Province Kalinga Apayao Ilocos Norte Ilocos Sur La Union Pangasinan “[Labuyo is the] strongest storm to make landfall so far this year,” bureau head Vicente Malano told reporters. At 10:00 p.m. Sunday, the center of “Labuyo” was located at 110 kilometers southeast of Casiguran, Aurora (15.6°N, 123.1°E), according to Pagasa. The typhoon is expected to make landfall in the north-eastern agricultural province of Aurora early morning on Monday, Pagasa said, adding that heavy rains are likely to cover a larger area including the capital Manila. Due to the typhoon signal in the National Capital Region, workers rolled down huge tarpaulins from outdoor advertising billboards along Edsa and major Metro Manila streets as a safety precaution. Meanwhile, storm signal no. 2 was raised in the following areas: Northern Quezon Useful links ♦ PAGASA ♦ NDRRMC ♦ Philippine Coast Guard ♦ MIAA Rizal Bulacan Pampanga Tarlac Zambales Calayan Babuyan Group of Islands Signal no. 1 was raised in Batanes, Bataan, Cavite, Batangas, Laguna, rest of Quezon, Camarines Norte, Camarines Sur, Catanduanes and Metro Manila. “Labuyo,” moving west-northwest at 19 kilometers per hour, was forecast to dump up to 25 millimeters of rain an hour within a 600-kilometre diameter of the typhoon, Pagasa said. By Monday evening, the typhoon is forecast 100 km southwest of Laoag City and by Tuesday evening, 470 km northwest of Laoag City or outside the Philippine Area of Responsibility. The Philippines is hit by about 20 storms and typhoons each year, some of them devastating. Nearly 2,000 were killed or went missing in flash floods and landslides when Typhoon “Pablo” cut across the southern island of Mindanao in December last year. About 850,000 people were also displaced, and many of them remain in temporary shelters months after the typhoon.
Posted on: Mon, 12 Aug 2013 03:04:27 +0000

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