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Leon now a super typhoon; landfall in Batanes not ruled out

Acor Arceo
30/10/2024 03:55:00

MANILA, Philippines – Leon (Kong-rey) intensified from a typhoon into a super typhoon on Wednesday morning, October 30, threatening extreme Northern Luzon.

Leon’s maximum sustained winds increased from 165 kilometers per hour to 185 km/h, said the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) in its 11 am bulletin on Wednesday.

The super typhoon’s gustiness is now up to 230 km/h from 205 km/h.

Leon was last spotted 350 kilometers east of Calayan, Cagayan, at 10 am. It slightly slowed down, moving west northwest at only 10 km/h from the previous 15 km/h.

The super typhoon is heading for Taiwan’s eastern coast, where it could make landfall on Thursday afternoon, October 31. Taiwan is within the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR).

But PAGASA is not ruling out landfall in Batanes. Leon is now projected to be closest to the province from late Wednesday evening to Thursday morning.

“This super typhoon will be near or at peak intensity during its closest point of approach to Batanes,” the weather bureau said.

After hitting Taiwan, Leon will start to weaken.

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More areas were placed under Signal No. 3 at 11 am on Wednesday. Below is the full list of areas where tropical cyclone wind signals are in effect.

Signal No. 3

Storm-force winds (89 to 117 km/h), moderate to significant threat to life and property

Signal No. 2

Gale-force winds (62 to 88 km/h), minor to moderate threat to life and property

Signal No. 1

Strong winds (39 to 61 km/h), minimal to minor threat to life and property

PAGASA said Signal No. 4 will be raised in Batanes on Wednesday afternoon “in anticipation of potentially destructive typhoon-force winds from Leon.”

The weather bureau is also not ruling out the raising of Signal No. 5 if the super typhoon “moves to the left of its forecast track.”

“The wind flow coming towards the circulation of Leon” is bringing strong to gale-force gusts to localities outside wind signal areas, too:

Wednesday, October 30

Thursday, October 31

Friday, November 1

PAGASA also reminded areas affected by Leon to be on alert for floods and landslides, as the super typhoon is bringing moderate to torrential rain, mainly to Northern Luzon.

Wednesday noon, October 30, to Thursday noon, October 31

Thursday noon, October 31, to Friday noon, November 1

Friday noon, November 1, to Saturday noon, November 2

In addition, PAGASA warned Batanes and Babuyan Islands that they face a moderate to high risk of “life-threatening” storm surges “reaching 2 to 3 meters above normal tide levels” in the next 48 hours.

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For sea conditions in the next 24 hours, the weather bureau maintained its forecast:

Up to very rough or high seas (travel is risky for all vessels)

Up to rough seas (small vessels should not venture out to sea)

Up to moderate seas (small vessels should take precautionary measures or avoid sailing, if possible)

After crossing Taiwan, Leon is expected to head for the East China Sea and exit PAR on Thursday evening or early Friday morning, November 1.

PAGASA said another landfall in mainland China is not being ruled out.

Leon is the Philippines’ 12th tropical cyclone for 2024, and the second for October. – Rappler.com

by KaiK.ai