Approaching Taiwan, China, and Hong Kong: Typhoon Saola

Approaching Taiwan, China, and Hong Kong: Typhoon Saola


Typhoon Saola, a powerful tropical cyclone with wind speeds approaching those of the strongest Atlantic hurricanes, was⁣ passing close to Taiwan on Wednesday. ‍It was also edging northward toward Hong Kong and ​the Chinese mainland.

Saola ⁢was about 111 miles ⁤southwest of Taiwan on⁢ Wednesday morning ​and‍ producing some ⁢rain there, ⁤according to the island’s Central Weather Bureau. It was passing through a body ⁢of water, the Luzon ⁢Strait, that separates⁢ Taiwan from the Philippines.

The storm has already prompted ‍evacuations in the Philippines and some school⁤ closures and travel disruptions in​ Taiwan, but has not been linked to any deaths or injuries.

Saola was generating sustained winds of 155 ⁣miles per hour on Wednesday, according to the Joint Typhoon ⁣Warning Center, a meteorological service operated by‍ the U.S. Navy. That is 2 m.p.h. below a Category 5 ⁣storm on the five-tier wind scale that ​is used to measure tropical cyclones in The Atlantic.

Saola‌ was ⁣more powerful than Hurricane Idalia, a Category 3 storm that was advancing on Florida’s west coast. Idalia ⁣was expected to reach Category 4 strength before making landfall on Wednesday morning.

Saola was also stronger than Hurricane Franklin, a Category 3 storm‌ that was near Bermuda early Wednesday and has been producing life-threatening surf and⁢ rip ‍currents along the coasts⁤ of that island and along the East Coast of the United States.

Hurricanes and ⁣typhoons ⁣are ⁢tropical cyclones⁣ with sustained winds of at least‌ 74⁣ m.p.h. The term “hurricane” ⁤refers to tropical cyclones in The‍ Atlantic basin; ⁤“typhoon” refers to ones that develop in the‍ northwestern Pacific ‍and​ affect Asia.

Typhoon Saola is named for an elusive species of wild ⁤ox that is native to ‍parts of Southeast ‍Asia.

Forecasters say it is hard to say exactly where — or if — the storm will make landfall. That is​ partly because⁤ Haikui, ​a tropical storm ​swirling farther east, might influence its trajectory. Saola could also be influenced by⁢ the annual summer monsoon, according to the Hong Kong’s Observatory,⁢ the meteorological agency for‌ the Chinese ⁢territory.

The Philippine meteorological agency said that Saola would likely move parallel to the coast of the southern Chinese province of Guangdong on Saturday, and that a landfall in mainland China was possible on Sunday.

Either way, the agency said, the storm was ⁢expected to weaken as it moved through the South China ‌Sea, becoming​ a tropical storm by Monday.

2023-08-30 09:07:03
Link from www.nytimes.com

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