tropical cyclones in PH

Batanes’ southern part also under Signal No. 3 due to Typhoon Kiko

Acor Arceo
Batanes’ southern part also under Signal No. 3 due to Typhoon Kiko

KIKO. Satellite image of Typhoon Kiko (Chanthu) as of September 10, 2021, 2 pm.

PAGASA

Typhoon Kiko (Chanthu) is heading northwest toward the Babuyan Islands-Batanes area at 20 km/h early Friday afternoon, September 10. Landfall in the northeastern part of Cagayan remains a possibility.

The southern part of Batanes was added to the list of areas under Signal No. 3, with Typhoon Kiko (Chanthu) still threatening extreme Northern Luzon early Friday afternoon, September 10.

The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) said in its 2 pm bulletin on Friday that Kiko was located 190 kilometers east of Tuguegarao City, Cagayan.

The typhoon was heading northwest toward the Babuyan Islands-Batanes area at 20 kilometers per hour (km/h).

It continues to have maximum sustained winds of 195 km/h and gustiness of up to 240 km/h. But PAGASA said Kiko’s maximum sustained winds may reach up to 205 km/h on Friday.

Here are the areas where tropical cyclone wind signals are raised as of 2 pm on Friday:

Signal No. 3 (destructive typhoon-force winds)
  • extreme northeastern part of Cagayan (Santa Ana, Gonzaga)
  • eastern part of Babuyan Islands (Babuyan Island, Didicas Island, Camiguin Island, Pamuktan Island, Calayan Island, Panulitan Island)
  • southern part of Batanes (Basco, Mahatao, Uyugan, Ivana, Sabtang)
Signal No. 2 (damaging gale-force to storm-force winds)
  • rest of Batanes
  • rest of Babuyan Islands
  • remaining eastern part of mainland Cagayan (Aparri, Camalaniugan, Lal-lo, Gattaran, Baggao, Peñablanca, Buguey, Santa Teresita, Gonzaga, Tuguegarao City, Iguig, Amulung, Alcala, Allacapan, Lasam, Ballesteros, Abulug)
  • northeastern part of Isabela (San Pablo, Maconacon, Divilacan, Palanan)
  • northeastern part of Apayao (Flora, Santa Marcela, Luna, Pudtol)
Signal No. 1 (strong winds)
  • rest of mainland Cagayan
  • eastern part of Ilocos Norte (Pagudpud, Adams, Dumalneg, Bangui, Vintar, Carasi, Nueva Era, Burgos, Pasuquin, Bacarra, Laoag City, Piddig, Solsona, Dingras, Sarrat, San Nicolas)
  • rest of Apayao
  • northern part of Kalinga (Balbalan, Pinukpuk, Tabuk City, Rizal)
  • eastern part of Mountain Province (Paracelis)
  • northeastern part of Abra (Tineg, Lacub, Malibcong)
  • northwestern and southeastern parts of Isabela (Santa Maria, Quezon, Mallig, Roxas, San Manuel, Cabatuan, Aurora, Cauayan City, Angadanan, San Guillermo, Dinapigue, San Mariano, Cabagan, Santo Tomas, Delfin Albano, Tumauini, Quirino, Burgos, Gamu, Ilagan City, Luna, Reina Mercedes, Naguilian, Benito Soliven)
  • northern part of Aurora (Dilasag, Casiguran)

Signal No. 4 remains the highest possible tropical cyclone wind signal for Kiko. PAGASA said this wind signal may be raised in parts of Babuyan Islands on Friday afternoon.

PAGASA maintained its rainfall forecast for the typhoon, covering Friday until Saturday evening, September 11. The affected regions must watch out for scattered to widespread floods and landslides.

Heavy to intense rain, with at times torrential rain
  • northeastern part of Cagayan including Babuyan Islands
  • Batanes
Heavy to intense rain
  • northern part of Isabela
  • rest of Cagayan
Moderate to heavy rain, with at times intense rain
  • rest of Cagayan Valley
  • Ilocos Region
  • Cordillera Administrative Region
  • northern and central parts of Aurora

PAGASA also warned that there is a moderate risk of storm surges 1 to 2 meters high occurring within 24 hours.

It added that “rising seawater along with the high waves from the shoreline moving inland may cause flooding in the low-lying coastal localities of Batanes, Cagayan including Babuyan Islands, and Isabela.”

Trips in seaboards affected by Kiko remain dangerous.

Rough to very high seas (waves 2.5 to 10 meters high)

Travel risky for all vessels, mariners advised to remain in port

  • seaboards of areas under Signal Nos. 1, 2, and 3
Moderate to rough seas (waves 1.2 to 3 meters high)

Travel risky for small vessels, mariners advised to avoid navigation

  • eastern seaboards of Central Luzon and Southern Luzon

Kiko is still expected to pass over the coastal waters of the northeastern part of Cagayan on Friday afternoon or evening.

Then it may cross the vicinity of Babuyan Islands and Batanes or pass within their coastal waters from Friday evening until Saturday afternoon or evening.

PAGASA reiterated, however, that landfall in the northeastern part of Cagayan remains a possibility.

After passing through the vicinity of extreme Northern Luzon, Kiko may head north for the rest of Saturday until Sunday afternoon, September 12, and make landfall in the eastern part of Taiwan or pass within its coastal waters. Taiwan is still within the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR).

Kiko may also weaken starting Sunday as it interacts with Taiwan’s rugged terrain, but it will remain a typhoon.

Finally, Kiko could exit PAR on Sunday afternoon or evening. Outside PAR, it will turn north northeast over the East China Sea. (READ: FAST FACTS: Tropical cyclones, rainfall advisories)

PROJECTED PATH. Forecast track of Typhoon Kiko (Chanthu) as of September 10, 2021, 2 pm.
PAGASA

Kiko is also enhancing the southwest monsoon or hanging habagat, which is bringing moderate to heavy rain to these areas on Friday:

  • Palawan
  • Occidental Mindoro
  • Western Visayas

The southwest monsoon may cause flash floods and landslides, as well as occasional gusty winds in coastal and upland localities of the affected areas.

Batanes’ southern part also under Signal No. 3 due to Typhoon Kiko

Kiko is the Philippines’ 11th tropical cyclone for 2021.

An average of 20 tropical cyclones form within or enter PAR each year. (READ: LIST: PAGASA’s names for tropical cyclones in 2021)

For the next six months, these are PAGASA’s estimates for the number of tropical cyclones inside PAR:

2021
  • September – 2 or 3
  • October – 2 or 3
  • November – 2 or 3
  • December – 1 or 2
2022
  • January – 0 or 1
  • February – 0 or 1

– Rappler.com

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Acor Arceo

Acor Arceo is the head of copy and editorial standards at Rappler. Trained in both online and TV newsrooms, Acor ensures consistency in editorial standards across all sections and also supervises Rappler’s coverage of disasters.