The Citizen (KZN)

Super typhoon on track for Philippine­s

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Manila – A super typhoon barrelled towards the Philippine­s yesterday and was on track to slam into the heavily populated main island of Luzon, forcing the evacuation­s of coastal communitie­s, authoritie­s said.

Super Typhoon Noru was packing maximum sustained wind speeds of 195km/h after an unpreceden­ted “explosive intensific­ation”, the state weather forecaster said.

The storm, the strongest to hit the Philippine­s this year, is expected to continue strengthen­ing as it makes landfall around 80km northeast of the sprawling capital Manila in the evening.

“We ask residents living in danger zones to adhere to calls for evacuation whenever necessary,” Philippine National Police chief General Rodolfo Azurin said.

The Philippine­s is regularly ravaged by storms, with scientists warning they are becoming more powerful as the world gets warmer because of climate change.

Weather forecaster Robb Gile said Noru’s rapid intensific­ation as it neared land was “unpreceden­ted”. The meteorolog­y agency said its wind speeds had increased by 90km/h in 24 hours.

“Typhoons are like engines – you need a fuel and an exhaust to function,” said Gile.

“In the case of Karding, it has a good fuel because it has plenty of warm waters along its track and then there is a good exhaust in the upper level of the atmosphere – so it’s a good recipe for explosive intensific­ation,” he said, using the local name for the storm.

In Manila, emergency personnel braced for the possibilit­y of strong winds and heavy rain battering the city of more than 13 million people.

Forced evacuation­s have started in some “high risk” areas of the capital, officials said.

“NCR is prepared. We are just waiting and hoping it will not hit us,” said Romulo Cabantac, regional director for the civil defense office, referring to the National Capital Region.

Calm before the storm

Noru comes nine months after another super typhoon devastated swathes of the country, killing more than 400 people and leaving hundreds of thousands homeless.

Residents in several municipali­ties in Quezon province, where this latest storm could make a direct hit, were being evacuated from their homes, said Mel Avenilla from the provincial disaster office.

In the neighbouri­ng province of Aurora, residents of Dingalan municipali­ty were being forced to seek shelter.

“People living near the coast have been told to evacuate. We live away from the coast so we’re staying put. We’re more worried about the water from the mountains,” said Rhea Tan, 54, a restaurant manager in Dingalan.

He said residents were securing the roofs of their houses.

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