Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Typhoon Nida Crossing Southern China After Making a Direct Hit on Philippines

August 2,2016

Landfall Near Hong Kong

Typhoon Nida made landfall near Hong Kong early Tuesday morning (local time) after soaking the northern Philippines during the weekend.
The Hong Kong Observatory (HKO) said that Nida made landfall near the Da Peng Peninsula between 3-4 a.m. Tuesday, local time. Nida was the equivalent of a Category 1 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale at that time.
Winds had gusted up to 94 mph as of Tuesday morning to the west of Hong Kong at Ngong Ping, HKO reported.
3.05 inches of rain was reported at at Hong Kong International Airport
In Hong Kong, thousands of workers were evacuated from an offshore oil platform.
Hundreds of people took refuge in government shelters across the city.
More than 180 flights to and from Hong Kong were canceled, bus, tram and ferry routes were suspended.
Nida weakened to a tropical storm but it still produced heavy rain in areas west of Hong Kong.
There were no initial reports of deaths or injuries
Nida is the first typhoon to track within 65 nautical miles of Hong Kong since Usagi on September 22, 2013.
has seen 15 within 65 nm since 1979, per NOAA. Majority of them Cat. 1s.

Landfall in the Philippines

Satellite image of Nida (Carina) Sunday evening, local time near the northern Philippine's Luzon Island.
(NOAA)
PAGASA said that Nida (Carina) made landfall near Cabutunan Point (northeast Luzon Island) on Sunday afternoon, local time.
Nida (Carina) had dumped more than 11 inches of rain on the northern Philippine town of Tuguegarao in the 24 hours ending 8 p.m. local time on Sunday. The Philippines are 12 hours ahead of U.S. Eastern Time.
No deaths or injuries had been reported as of Monday night, Philippine time, but Presidential Communications Sec. Martin Andanar told CNN Philippines that national emergency agencies are on still standby, in case of flooding and landslides. Andanar said family food packs have already been prepositioned, with 30,000 food packs in Region 1 and 1,900 food packs in Region 8.

MORE: Typhoon Nepartak Impacts Taiwan, China

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