The feverish mobilization of resources came amid mounting calls for help from devastated towns and reports indicating that damage to agriculture alone has already went beyond P200 million mark.
In a briefing held at the Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council (PDRRMC) center here late Wednesday afternoon, officials reported that Pinamalayan town, where typhoon Nona made landfall on Tuesday, was hardest hit with a still undetermined number of residents rendered homeless.
Vincent Gahol, officer in charge of the PDRRMC, said the provincial government has been exerting efforts to restore electricity in Oriental Mindoro by Friday, or at least in Calapan City, the economic center of the province.
Provincial agriculturist Christine Pine said their initial estimates showed that damage to agriculture has reached P202,096,750, almost more than half of which, or P144 million, was in Pinamalayan town.
Clearing operation in Calapan meanwhile continued today even as most commercial establishments, in the absence of power generating sets, remained closed.
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