Tampilkan postingan dengan label typhoon. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label typhoon. Tampilkan semua postingan

Minggu, 09 Oktober 2011

NO EXTRA FUNDS; PALACE CAN COVER P13.8 B FOR TYPHOON REHAB


MalacaƱang is not inclined to seek a supplemental budget from Congress to bankroll the increasing cost of rehabilitation of typhoon-hit provinces which now stands at P13.8 billion.

Presidential Spokesman Edwin Lacierda said Sunday the government has sufficient funds as of now to address the multi-billion-peso damage to agriculture and infrastructure left by the typhoons “Pedring” and “Quiel.”

“As stated by Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima, there is enough fiscal space in our budget to handle the calamity,” Lacierda said over staterun Radyo ng Bayan, when asked if the Palace will consider seeking additional budget from Congress. Asked if the Palace will seek international aid for people adversely affected by the recent floods, Lacierda said: “Let us wait and see. We will discuss the issue of state calamity this week and we will let you know.” Defense Secretary Voltaire

Gazmin had earlier recommended to President Aquino the declaration of calamity in areas affected by the massive devastation wrought by the back-to-back typhoons, correcting earlier reports that the Defense Chief had called for a national state of calamity.

The proposal is still being studied by the President.

Damage to agriculture and infrastructure has reached P13.8 billion, higher than that left by tropical storm “Ondoy” in 2009.

Continue Reading at Manila Bulletin

Rabu, 05 Oktober 2011

P-NOY TAKES TRUCK RIDE TO WATERWORLD


President Aquino assured the nation yesterday that the government was ready to do rehabilitation work and provide relief assistance to the victims of typhoons “Pedring” and “Quiel” as some P8 billion in calamity funds were on standby and could be utilized for affected areas.

Aquino visited the flood-ravaged provinces of Tarlac, Pampanga and Bulacan, riding an Army truck in the town of Calumpit, to personally assess the damage from the two typhoons.

Unlike in the past when calamity funds were depleted early on, the President said that the P8-billion existing calamity funds were carried over from 2010 to 2011.

He said there had been releases for Leyte-Samar area, Bicol and Caraga early in the year, but the government still has P8 billion to utilize.

Speaking at a briefing of the Regional Development Council (RDC) at the Hiyas Convention Center here, the President said the list of “must do” damaged infrastructure facilities in Region 3 amounting to P323.5 million could be immediately addressed by the government.

He said he was still waiting for the complete assessment of the extent of damage caused by Pedring and Quiel as it was expected to exceed that of “Ondoy” in 2009.

He also justified the government’s reason not to declare a national state of calamity and that the incoming typhoon “Ramon” had dissipated based on reports.

The President also confronted the issues against him for allegedly being absent during the time of the disaster and for his government’s slow response to the people’s needs.

Continue reading at the philippine star

Kalinga has Zero Casualty, Typhoon Damages to Infra, Crops Reach P146M


The province has zero casualty buttyphoons Pedring and Quiel left P146,389,904 worth of damages on government infrastructure facilities and crops when it pummeled North Luzon over the past week.

The summary of typhoon report of the province showed that damages to roads and flood control structures reached P124,930,000 while damages to crops was posted at P21,459,904.

George Miing, engineer, reported that typhoon Pedring caused P29,930,000 worth of damages to roads and P95,000,000 worth to flood control facilities in various parts of the province.

Because of damaged flood control systems, rice lands near the Chico river particularly along Barangays Tuliao, Tanioc, Laya West, and Cabaruan were washed-out by flood waters.

Report from OIC provincial agriculturist Domingo Bakilan shows that damages to rice had been estimated at P6,089,600; corn at P11,691,900; and high value crops at P3,678,404.

When typhoon Pedring hit the province, a large portion of corn lands was about to be harvested while most of the palay wer on their reproductive stage, and vegetables were ready for harvesting.

The agri-based towns of Tabuk, Rizal, Pinukpuk, and Tanudan suffered most in damages to rice, corn and high value crops, including coffee, the report shows.

Because of continued rains brought by Pedring and Quiel, Tinglayan-Bontoc road is still closed due to landslides and a road cut was reported along Barangay Caluttit in Bontoc.

Teodore Owek, engineer of Kalinga Engineering District, said that while clearing operation is going on, they can not yet give the exact date as to when the road will be opened. Another road block had been caused by eroded boulders along Barangay Pantikian between Salegseg and Balbalasang road section in Balbalan municipality.

Smaller road problems in other parts of the province had been cleared, Owek said.

Meanwhile, typhoons Pedring and Quiel affected a total of 4,848 families in the province.

Reports from the Provincial Social Welfare and Development Office (PSWDO) show 10 houses were totally flattened by Pedring’s and Quiel’s strong winds while 331 were partially destroyed.

At the height of the typhoons, families were evacuated in various evacuation centers by local disaster councils.

The municipality of Pasil suffered the heaviest from typhoon Pedring affecting 1,806 families and left 56 houses damaged, one totally destroyed.

With typhoon Quiel, Pinukpuk town reported 411 families affected, although there were two houses partially damaged previously from typhoon Pedring.

The PSWDO report shows that all eight towns of the province submitted respective reports on damages to houses and affected families, while municipal disaster councils provided initial relief to victims.

Rosemaritez Oyawon of the PSWDO, who is the designated Provincial Disaster coordinator, said the Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (PDRRMC) has yet to assess the extent of damages of every municipality as basis for its action in providing the appropriate assistance.

Oyawon assured, though, that relief assistance shall be provided by the PDRRMC as soon as possible.

(source: PIA)

Minggu, 02 Oktober 2011

More Flooding from Dams Seen as Quiel Enters Philippines


MANILA, Philippines - Six dams in Luzon continued to release water yesterday even as the weather bureau again raised storm warning signal no. 3 over Cagayan and Isabela as typhoon “Quiel” gained strength and moved toward Northern Luzon.

Quiel moves closer to the Philippine area of responsibility while many parts of Luzon are still submerged in floodwaters in the aftermath of typhoon “Pedring,” even as the government is still reeling from the massive destruction to agriculture and infrastructure and loss of lives.

The National Disaster Risk Management and Coordinating Council (NDRRMC) explained yesterday that the opening of the floodgates of the country’s major dams in Luzon is necessary in order to prevent a major catastrophe.

Acknowledging that the current widespread flooding in the provinces of Nueva Ecija, Bulacan and Pampanga has been a result of the opening of the spillway valves of the Pantabangan Dam in Nueva Ecija and Angat Dam in Norzaragay, Bulacan, NDRRMC chief Benito Ramos said these are precautionary measures to prevent the collapse of these huge water facilities.

In the event the Pantabangan Dam collapses, Ramos said the entire Nueva Ecija, parts of Pampanga, specifically Arayat, and nearby Bulacan will be wiped out.

MalacaƱang gave assurance that government agencies are being mobilized to address the concerns of the more than one million residents in these provinces, which are still submerged in floodwaters.

Interior Secretary Jesse Robredo said he and local officials in Bulacan, including Gov. Wilfredo Alvarado, are planning to meet with the dam managements to establish coordinated efforts which might help minimize the cause of flooding, especially during typhoons.

Continue Reading at Phil Star)

Roof Deep Floods Trap Hundreds in Bulacan


MANILA, Philippines - Rescue teams from various groups trooped to Bulacan province to rescue hundreds of residents, who were forced to stay on their houses' roofs, due to massive flooding since last night.

Undersecretary Benito Ramos, head of the National Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC), said that rescue teams from the Armed Forces of the Philippine (AFP), Philippine National Police (PNP), Philippine Coast Guard, the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority and two local government units from Metro Manila have dispatched teams to join rescue efforts for hundreds of residents trapped in Hagonoy and Calumpit towns.

Ramos said rescue teams from the military's side dispatched to Bulacan province include AFP's Disaster Rescue Task Force, Philippine Army, Philippine Navy and Philippine Marines.

He said that the PNP has also sent teams from its Public Safety Battalion and Maritime Group. The MMDA sent two teams with rubber boats have already arrived in the flooded province.

Meanwhile, he said the local governments of Pasay and Pasig cities have also sent rescue teams.

All teams carried with them rubber boats, which will be used to fetch residents in Calumpit and Hagonoy towns who have been trapped on their roofs since Thursday night.

He said four helicopters have also been dispatched to survey the flooded towns and look for trapped residents.

Philippine Red Cross (PRC) secretary-general Gwendolyn Pang said earlier that additional teams have been sent to the province to join the rescue efforts.

Reports said that more than 70 residents have been rescued by a military rescue team in Calumpit town. Reports added that more than 1,000 families still trapped on their houses' roofs have yet to be rescued.

Bulacan Gov. Wilhelmino Alvarado said that a total of 29 barangays in Calumpit and six more barangays in Hagonoy are submerged in roof-deep floodwater.

Radio reports said that hundreds of residents are either trapped on the second floor or the roofs of their houses.

Alvarado said that they have already ordered the forced evacuation of the residents in all areas affected by the massive flooding. However, several residents refused to be evacuated.

Ramos said that the NDRRMC has also received reports that the town of Paombong was also flooded. He added that several towns in Pampanga, including Apaklit, Lubao and Candaba, were also swamped by floodwater.

The provinces of Tarlac and Nueva Ecija, which has been placed under a state of calamity, are also reeling from floods spawned by heavy rains brought on by Typhoon "Pedring" (Nesat).

Several areas in Luzon, particularly provinces located in the north, are also isolated due to floods and landslides that rendered several roads and bridges impassable.

Plea for rescue

Eva Enductivo, one of the residents trapped in Barangay Frances in Calumpit town, pleaded to be rescued from their house over radio dzMM.

"Gusto na rin po naming ma-rescue," she said.

The woman said that her family and several neighbors are trapped on their house's second floor.

Authorities have yet to determine if there are already fatalities.

Local authorities and affected residents, who were able to evacuate before the floodwaters rose to roof-deep, are blaming the release of water from the dams of Ipo and Angat.

Enductivo said they were not informed that the dams will release more water.

Luzon dams release water

Engr. Alex Palada, division manager of the National Power Corporation’s flood forecasting and warning system, denied that the release of water from the dams are the is the main cause of the massive flooding in Bulacan.

Palada said that they are releasing 459 cubic meters of water per second from Angat Dam. He said that Angat Dam's water level as of 8 a.m. today was 213.26 meters, which is 3.26 meter higher than its normal water level of 210 meters above sea level.

He said that the main cause of flooding in Bulacan is the swelling of the Angat and Pampanga rivers. He added that Bulacan is a catch basin of floodwaters from Nueva Ecija, Pangasinan and Pampanga provinces, which were heavily flooded due to heavy rains brought on by Typhoon "Pedring."

Calumpit Mayor James de Jesus said that displaced residents have been forced to stay along McArthur Highway due to the lack of evacuation centers.

De Jesus said they are expecting the floods in the town and other areas in the province to rise further as two more storms are expected to bring heavy rains over Luzon during the weekend.

He said that Calumpit town is used to floods as it is a catch basin of water flowing from the upper provinces down to Manila Bay. However, he said that today’s flooding was the worst in 40 years.

Even before the massive flooding took place, Calumpit town has been placed under a state of calamity due to the damages it suffered from the onslaught of "Pedring." Another town in Bulacan -- Obando -- is under a state of calamity.

Based on monitoring of the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration, three dams in Luzon, including Angat and Ipo dams, are already on spilling levels and a total of six dams are already releasing water.

Dam authorities said that the water releases are necessary and in preparation for the storms that are expected to hit land in northern Luzon.

'Quiel', 'Ramon'

PAGASA has raided public storm warning signal No. 2 over the provinces of Cagayan and Isabela as Typhoon "Quiel" approached the coastlines of northern Luzon.

Signal No. 1 is raised over Calayan and Babuyan group of islands, Apayao, Kalinga, Mt. Province, Ifugao, Nueva Vizcaya, Pangasinan, Benguet, La Union, Ilocos Sur, Ilocos Norte and Abra.

Majority of the provinces under storm alert have yet to recover from the devastation of Typhoon "Pedring" that dumped heavy rains and slammed strong winds into Luzon early this week, leaving more than 40 people dead and billions worth of crops and infrastructure damaged.

As of 10 a.m. today, Typhoon Quiel's center was estimated at 640 kilometers east of Tuguegarao City, packing maximum sustained winds of 140 kilometers per hour and gusts of up to 170 kph.

The storm was moving fast, westward, at a speed of 22 kph.

PAGASA said it expects the typhoon to make landfall by Saturday and may directly hit Cagayan. The typhoon may spare Metro Manila, the weather bureau added.

Meanwhile, weather forecasters said that while "Quiel" is approaching land, another storm that will be named "Ramon" will enter the Philippine area of responsibility.

Both weather disturbances are expected to enhance the southwest monsoon and will bring heavy rains over Luzon and the western part of Visayas.

Rains from the two storms are expected to swell water reserves in major dams in Luzon. -- Angelo L. Gutierrez

Source philstar

Rabu, 28 September 2011

'PEDRING' DEATH TOLL RISES TO 33; 41 MISSING


The death toll from Typhoon “Pedring” (international name: Nesat) climbed to 33 on Wednesday night as floods submerged thousands of homes in the country. The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) reported 4 more deaths caused by the typhoon's onslaught.

NDRRMC said 3 more residents reportedly drowned in Dampalit, Malabon City and 1 was hit by a fallen tree in Bauan, Batangas. The most number of reported deaths occurred in Region 3, with 9 fatalities.

Forty-one others remained missing while 31 were injured.

Total damage in agriculture and infrastructure caused by the typhoon reached more than P1.1 billion.

In Region 3 alone, the damage was estimated to cost nearly P950 million.

A state of calamity has been declared in Malabon; Navotas; Obando, Bulacan; Isabela and Quirino in the wake of the disaster.

Some 73,228 families or 346,171 individuals in the country were affected by the typhoon, according to the NDRRMC.

The typhoon left the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) around 1 p.m. Wednesday, the state weather bureau said.

However, another tropical storm (international name: Nalgae) is expected to enter PAR on Thursday.

The weather disturbance will be named “Quiel”. -- With a report from Jenny Reyes, ABS-CBN News

Selasa, 27 September 2011

Makati Buendia Osmena Collapsed Billboard


Makati Buendia Osmena Collapsed Billboard (Typhoon Pedring) 9.27.11.

Video of the collapsed billboard at Osmena-Buendia Makati


Pedrings Typhoon Pictures


Typhoon Pedring, internationally known as Typhoon Nesat, has hit the capital of the Philippines with strong gusting winds and a fierce wall of water!





Typhoon Pedring batters the Philippines with pictures


27 September 2011: Filipinos look at the damage done by strong waves at the Manila Bay walk area in Roxas Boulevard in Manila, caused by Typhoon Pedring (Nesat) which slammed into Luzon. Strong rain had caused flooding in nearby provinces and strong winds toppled power lines and left millions of Filipinos without electricity. (Mike Alquinto/NPPA Images)


Kibitzers enjoy getting soaked by strong waves at the Manila Bay walk at Roxas Boulevard in Manila, caused strong waves and piles of garbage as Typhoon Pedring (Nesat) slammed into Luzon. (Mike Alquinto/NPPA Images)





Filipinos and vehicles try to navigate through flooded Roxas Boulevard in Manila. (Mike Alquinto/NPPA Images)


Vehicles try to navigate through flooded Roxas Boulevard in Manila, (Mike Alquinto/NPPA Images)


Kibitzers watch as strong waves slam into a damaged part of the Manila Bay dike at Roxas Boulevard in Manila.

'Pedring' kills 5 in Metro Manila


MANILA, Philippines - At least five people have been reported killed in Metro Manila as typhoon "Pedring" continued to slam the metropolis with strong winds before noon today.

Radio reports said that four people were buried alive inside their house after a wall collapsed in Barangay Mapulang Lupa, Valenzuela this morning.

The fatalities include a grandmother and her three grandchildren, report said.

The report said that the four victims were about to leave the house when the wall collapsed into their home due to strong winds.

Authorities are waiting for a backhoe to dig up the bodies under mud and debris.

An earlier report said that a mother died and her 13-year-old son was hurt after a tree fell into their makeshift house in Caloocan City.

The incident happened around 6:15 a.m.

In its 6 a.m. report, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) said that one-year-old Chawn Andrie Daliora died after falling into a creek in Barangay Cabugao, Bato town, Catanduanes province. The boy's body was recovered 10:00 p.m. yesterday.

Continue Reading at Manila Bulletin

Rabu, 31 Agustus 2011

3-4 na Bagyo Tatama sa PH Ngayong September PAGASA


Makaraang umalis na sa bansa ang pinaka huling bagyong si Mina sa buwan ng Agosto ng taong ito, aabutin naman sa tatlo hanggang apat na bagyo ang malamang na tumama sa bansa sa buwan ng Setyembre.

Ayon sa Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA), hindi pa alam kung ang inaasahang bagyo na tatama sa bansa sa susunod na buwan ay singlakas ni Mina.

Kaugnay nito, sinabi ni DOST Undersecretary Graciano Yumul Jr na ang tatlo o apat na bagyo na maaa­ring tumama sa bansa ngayong Setyembre ay kabilang sa 13 bagyo na maaaring tumama sa bansa ngayong taong 2011, mas mataas sa 11 bagyo na tumama sa bansa noong 2010.

Anya ang mga bagyong tatama sa bansa sa mga buwan ng BER tulad ng September, October, November at December ay magla landfall o babagsak sa kalupaan.

Ang walo pang bagyo na sisimulang tatama sa bansa ay may pangalang Nonoy, Onyok, Pedring, Quiel, Ramon, Sendong, Tisoy, at Ursula pero pag may naganap pang bagyo makaraan nito ay tatawaging Viring, Weng, Yoyoy, at Zigzag.

Source: Pilipino Star Ngayon

Minggu, 28 Agustus 2011

Irene shuts down New York, kills 12


Water from New York Harbor washes into Battery Park as a cyclist braves Hurricane Irene on Sunday. AFP PHOTO

WASHINGTON - (UPDATED 10:50 p.m.) The death toll from Irene has risen to 12 across five eastern US states, emergency officials said Sunday, as the hurricane was downgraded to a tropical storm, passing New York City.


Half of the deaths were in North Carolina, where Irene made landfall early Saturday morning with 85 mile (140 kilometer) per hour winds, before heading up the eastern seaboard and scoring a rare direct hit on New York.

The toll rose from eight overnight with new fatalities including a man hit by a falling tree in North Carolina, a woman in Maryland hit by a falling chimney, and a man killed by a storm-related electrical fire in Connecticut.

The breakdown of fatalities was: six in North Carolina, three in Virginia, and one each in Connecticut, Florida in Maryland.

The youngest fatalities were a boy killed by a falling tree in his apartment in Newport News, a city on a coastal peninsula in Virginia, and a girl who died in North Carolina.

"A 15-year-old girl was killed in a car accident on her way back from the beach after vacationing in North Carolina," explained emergency official Patty McQuillan. "The traffic light at the intersection was not working, the power was out."

North Carolina emergency management spokesman Brad Deen said one of the six victims in his state was a man who had a heart attack on Friday while nailing plywood over his windows in preparation for the hurricane.

Two people were also killed in the state in separate driving accidents. Another North Carolina fatality was a man struck by a falling tree limb while outside feeding his animals.

One storm-related death was a 55-year-old surfer who took to his board in treacherously high waves off the Florida coast on Friday.

"We had sent out an advisory recommending everyone check beach reports and use an abundance of caution before entering the water," state emergency official William Booher told AFP.

Irene is on track to continue up the east coast Sunday into the densely populated northeastern states of Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts. Officials warned that flood damage from Irene's heavy rains may be felt for days, and millions of people are without power.

Hurricane Irene, which has been downgraded to a tropical storm Sunday night, lashed New York shutting down America's largest city and flooding outlying communities after killing at least nine people along the US east coast.

The first hurricane to hit the Big Apple for a generation crashed into Manhattan's skyscrapers overnight, accompanied by lightning, reports of tornados and near horizontal walls of rain.

As Irene approached the New Jersey shore, its wind strength diminished to 75 miles (120 kilometers) an hour, at the threshold of hurricane status. But it still remained a massive storm.

The hurricane made its second landfall near Atlantic City, New Jersey, just before sunrise Sunday and its eye was "nearing New York City," the National Hurricane Center said.

New York City resembled a ghost town after 370,000 people were told to evacuate flood-prone areas, including near Wall Street and at Coney Island, and mass transport was shut down.

Subway trains, buses and the famous Staten Island ferry all closed Saturday, as did all nearby airports, paralyzing the city. Part of the George Washington bridge, connecting Manhattan to New Jersey, was closed.

The immediate fear was that torrential rain, a maximum high tide and more than eight feet (2.8 meters) in wind-driven ocean surge would flood Battery Park in southern Manhattan and on into the narrow streets of the Wall Street district.

But by 1230 GMT the seawalls appeared to be mostly holding, although water lapped over the edges into a park on Manhattan's East River.

There was also severe flooding in beach resorts on Long Island, to the east of the city, and along the famed Jersey shore to to the south.

In Brooklyn, which has a long, low coastline, some streets suffered substantial flooding and the few cars about also had to negotiate a growing number of downed tree branches.

The howling winds set off a number of car alarms and police patrolled the deserted streets and outside shuttered subway stations.

While nearly all shops in the city of more than eight million people were closed, Sam Hamad decided to keep his corner store open. He reported brisk business selling New York bagels, coffee and basic groceries.

"This store is like my own home, so I decided to stay open, even though I had to drive half an hour from where I live to get here," she said.

Claudette Wright, a caregiver at a home for the sick who was heading to work in the storm, was happy to find a shop open.

"I work 16-hour days, so I need my coffee," she said.

In a dramatic press conference late Saturday, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the time for evacuations was "over."

"At this point, if you haven't evacuated, our suggestion is you stay where you are," he said. "Nature is a lot stronger than the rest of us."

Irene made its first US landfall Saturday at 8:00 am (1200 GMT) at Cape Lookout, North Carolina, near a chain of barrier islands and quickly proved deadly.

At least nine people died Saturday -- in car accidents, by heart attack and by falling trees -- in North Carolina, Virginia and Florida. The youngest victim, an 11-year-old boy, died when a tree crashed through his apartment building in Newport News, Virginia.

The storm then reentered the ocean off the coasts on Virginia and Maryland.

On its passage up the coast, Irene knocked out power supplies for well over a million people, triggered the cancelation of more than 8,000 flights, and forced nearly two million people to evacuate, half of them in New Jersey.

In New York, more than 70,000 people woke without electricity, especially in the outer boroughs of the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island, power provider Con Edison said.

Officials say Manhattan's skyscrapers are not at risk of serious damage, but warn that power outages might strand residents without light, water or elevators.

The disruption took on an international character after the area's three big airports -- John F. Kennedy International Airport, LaGuardia and Newark -- were ordered to stop all flights at 10:00 pm (0200 GMT).

The flightaware.com website, which tracks airport arrivals and departures, estimated that 8,337 flights would be canceled during the weekend, mainly US domestic trips. It warned that the figure would rise.

President Barack Obama, who cut short his summer vacation, visited the Federal Emergency Management Agency's operations center in Washington on Saturday, where he said the east coast was in for a "long 72 hours."

Obama chaired a meeting at the National Response Coordination Center set up to marshaling federal and local hurricane-relief efforts.

"This is going to be a tough slog getting through this thing," Obama said during a video teleconference including senior federal officials and local government agencies.

Some 65 million people live in the urban corridor from Washington north to Boston, and experts have said the damage could cost anything up to $12 billion to restore.

Hurricanes are rare in the northeastern United States -- the last major hurricane to hit New York was Gloria in 1985.

Sabtu, 27 Agustus 2011

Hurricane Irene Picture


Hurricane Irene hits Cape Hatteras National Seashore in Rodanthe North Carolina August 27 2011 REUTERS Jose Luis Magana.


Hurricane Irene hits Cape Hatteras National Seashore in Rodanthe North Carolina August 27 2011 Hurricane Irene howled ashore in North Carolina with heavy winds rain and surf on Saturday on a path threatening the densely populated U S East Coast




Residents of the Wavecrest Home for Adults wait to be evacuated from the Far Rockaway section of New York City in anticipation of Hurricane Irene.

HURRICANE IRENE NEARING NEW YORK


Hurricane Irene closed in on the U.S. Atlantic coast on Friday, triggering emergency preparations that included unprecedented evacuations and mass transit shutdowns in New York City as the menacing storm approached.

As Irene careened north, rain and tropical storm force winds and ferocious surf began pummeling the North Carolina coast. “The core of the hurricane will approach the coast of North Carolina tonight and pass near or over the North Carolina coast on Saturday,” the U.S. National Hurricane Center said in an advisory on Friday evening.

Washington and states from the Carolinas through Maine declared emergencies due to Irene, a nearly 600 mile (960 km)-wide hurricane that put 55 million Americans on the eastern seaboard on alert and that experts say could cause billions of dollars in damages.

President Barack Obama said the impact of the storm, an unusually large storm, could be “extremely dangerous and costly” for a nation that still remembers destructive Hurricane Katrina in 2005. “All indications point to this being a historic hurricane,” Obama said.

Hundreds of thousands of residents and vacationers were evacuating from Irene’s path.

A quarter of a million New Yorkers were ordered to leave homes in low-lying areas, including the financial district surrounding Wall Street in Manhattan, as authorities prepared for dangerous storm surge and flooding on Sunday in the city and farther east on Long Island.

Some New York hospitals in flood-prone areas were already evacuating patients, and New York’s mass transit system, which carries 8.5 million people on weekdays, was due to start shutting down around noon (1600 GMT) on Saturday.

“We’ve never done a mandatory evacuation before and we wouldn’t be doing it now if we didn’t think this storm had the potential to be very serious,” Mayor Michael Bloomberg told a news conference.

As U.S. authorities ramped up preparations to cope with a potential major natural disaster on the densely populated East Coast, U.S. airlines canceled more nearly 7,000 flights and moved airplanes out of Irene’s path.

Officials were taking every precaution with Irene because they remember all too well how Katrina swamped New Orleans, killing up to 1,800 people and causing $80 billion in damages.

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said the military stood ready to aid in the response to Irene, with more than 100,000 National Guard forces available if needed in eastern states.

Coastal communities stocked up on food and water and tried to secure homes, vehicles and boats. Cities, ports, hospitals, oil refineries and nuclear plants activated emergency plans.

The earliest edges of Irene began to knock down trees, caused localized flooding and had knocked out power to 7,600 residents of Wilmington, North Carolina by Friday night.

People huddling in a shelter at a local school said they feared the storm’s potential impact but were reluctant to evacuate entirely.

“We were going to go to Charlotte, but we were told we might not be able to get back if there was a lot of damage,” said Chastity May, 34, as she watched over her 4-year-old son.

Some were looking to capitalize on the approaching storm.

Greg Bayly, 52, and Scott Olden, 24, were selling generators out of a rented cargo truck along a busy Wilmington street that leads out to nearby beaches. Bayly said the pair could process credit cards to complete purchases, despite the rapidly deteriorating weather conditions.

U.S. federal and state leaders, from Obama downward, urged the millions of Americans in the hurricane’s path to prepare and to heed evacuation orders if they received them.

WIND FIELD “HUGE”

Irene weakened early on Friday to a Category 2 hurricane from a 3 on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale, but it was still carrying winds of up to 100 miles per hour (155 kph).

It was expected to remain a hurricane as it sweeps up the mid-Atlantic coast over the weekend. The Miami-based hurricane center said it could dip below hurricane strength before reaching New England, but its impact would not vary much.

At 8 p.m. EDT (midnight GMT), Irene’s center was 235 miles (380 km) south-southwest of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina and churning north-northeast.

Irene, the first hurricane of the 2011 Atlantic season, has already caused as much as $1.1 billion in insured losses in the Caribbean this week, catastrophe modeling company AIR Worldwide said, with more losses expected to come.

The hurricane center said hurricane force winds extended outward up to 90 miles (150 km) from Irene’s center, while tropical storm force winds extended out up to 290 miles (465 km), giving the storm a vast wind field width of nearly 600 miles (960 km).

“The wind field is huge,” NHC Director Bill Read told Reuters Insider.

In earlier comments, Read said Irene, which will be the first significant hurricane to affect the populous U.S. Northeast in decades, would lash the eastern seaboard with tropical storm-force winds and a “huge swath of rain” from the Carolinas to New England.

“WATCHING THAT BIG WHITE SWIRL”

Wall Street firms scrambled to raise cash into early next week in case Irene caused major disruption in trading.

Traders were “watching that big white swirl” on their television sets, said Guy LeBas, chief fixed income strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott in Philadelphia.

Northeast oil, natural gas and power facilities also made preparations.

Brent crude oil futures rose in choppy trading on Friday as the storm approached and traders weighed comments by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke on the economy.

Benedict Willis III, director of floor operations for investment banking boutique Sunrise Securities, said the New York Stock Exchange had a responsibility to open on Monday after the storm passes because millions of investors will be relying on it for stock prices.

“But if the waters rise this high,” he said, gesturing at the buzzing trading floor, “then it’s a bigger problem than I can handle. My name’s not Noah.”

Irene will be the first hurricane to hit the U.S. mainland since Ike pounded Texas in 2008.

In Washington, Irene forced the postponement of Sunday’s dedication ceremony for the new memorial honoring civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. Tens of thousands of people, including the president, had been expected to attend.

Flooding from Irene killed at least one person in Puerto Rico and two in Dominican Republic. The storm knocked out power in the Bahamian capital, Nassau, and blocked roads with trees.

Reuters

'Eye of typhoon' hits Cagayan


MANILA, Philippines - Typhoon 'Mina' made landfall in northern Luzon Saturday killing at least 2 people in Pangasinan.

Parts of northern, northeastern and northwestern parts of Luzon are now suffering the brunt of Mina after the weather disturbance made landfall in Cagayan, Saturday.

“Tumama na po ang sentro ng mata ng typhoon Mina kaninang 7:55 ng umaga at ang tama po niya ay sa Naglocsadon Point sa may Gonzaga, Cagayan,” said Undersecretary Graciano Yumul of the Department of Science and Technology (DOST).

The typhoon gained strength overnight and was bearing maximum sustained winds of 195 kilometers per hour (kph) near the center as it moved northwest at 9 kph.

“Ang bagyo dahil stationery sya, napakabagal niya, napakadaming enerhiya at tubig ang nakuha niya sa karagatan at lahat ng tubig na yun ay hindi lang ibinibagsak sa Cagayan ngayon. Lahat po ng ating field report sa Ilocos Sur, Ilocos Norte, Kalinga, Apayao, Isabela at Aurora , nagre-report na po sila ng napakalakas ng pagulan at hangin,” said Yumul.

COntinue reading at ABS-CBNNEWS

Jumat, 26 Agustus 2011

Cagayan at Isabela, signal No 3 dahil kay 'Mina'


Napanatili ng bagyong Mina ang kaniyang lakas at nagbabanta ito ng pananalasa sa hilagang bahagi ng Luzon.

Huling namataan ang bagyo sa layong 190 kilometro silangan ng Casiguran, Aurora at taglay ang lakas ng hangin umaabot sa 140 kilometers per hour (kph) at pagbugso nasa 170 kilometro kada oras.

Kumikilos ang bagyo sa bilis na 13 kilometro bawat oras at tinatahak ang direksiyon ng pakanluran.

Sa araw ng Biyernes, ang bagyo ay inaasahang nasa 140 kilometro hilagang silangan ng Aparri, Cagayan at sa Sabado ng gabi ito ay nasa 200 kilometro hilaga hilagang silangan ng Basco, Batanes.

Nakataas ang public storm signal number 3 sa lugar ng Isabela, Cagayan at Northern Aurora.

Nasa signal number 2 naman ang Batanes, Calayan, Babuyan Group, Apayao, Kalinga, Quirino at nalalabing bahagi ng Aurora.

Habang nasa ilalim ng signal number 1 ang Ilocos Norte, Abra, Ilocos Sur, Mountain Province, Benguet, Ifugao, Nueva Vizcaya at Nueva Ecija.

Source Via BomboRadyo