Fewer storms hitting PH but more intense, dangerous

Fewer storms hitting PH but more intense, dangerous

/ 06:49 PM November 23, 2024

The Philippines has been witnessing fewer but more intense storms in the past few years, the country’s weather bureau said Saturday.

TYPHOON NIKA AND OTHERS / NOVEMBER 11, 2024
State weather bureau personnel show the path and location of Typhoon Nika and other weather disturbance in the vicinity of the Philippines at the PAGASA headquarters in Quezon City in this file photo taken on November 11, 2024. INQUIRER PHOTO / GRIG C. MONTEGRANDE

MANILA, Philippines – The Philippines has been witnessing fewer but more intense storms in the past few years, the country’s weather bureau said Saturday.

Attributing the phenomenon to global warming, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) said the country should expect this trend to continue in the coming years.

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“Based on historical record, decreasing trend ‘yung number ng tropical cyclones dito sa atin, but (may) increasing trend ng mga bilang ng mga bagyo na magiging mas intense (Based on historical record, there is a decreasing trend in the frequency of tropical cyclones here, but there is an increasing trend in the number of typhoons that will be more intense),” Pagasa climate monitoring and prediction chief Dr. Ana Liza Solis said during a Presidential Communications Office-organized media workshop on disaster communications.

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The Philippines had annual average of at least 19 to 20 tropical cyclones the past 10 years, Solis said.

Now, it is seldom the case.

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“Ibig sabihin, historically, ay marami tayong typhoon at super typhoon category. At continuous ‘yung trend na posibleng mas nagiging intense ‘yung typhoon at super typhoon category natin (That means, historically we have had many typhoons and super typhoon categories. And the trend that our typhoons and super typhoon categories may become more intense is upwards),” she added.

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READ: NDRRMC: Death reports due to cyclones Nika, Ofel, Pepito rise to 12

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With this occurrence likely to persist amid the increasing severity of climate change, Solis said the way forward is to prepare and craft a long-term adaptation strategy.

“We need to adapt to it at maging resilient kasi darating at darating iyon. We need to cope with it (We need to adapt to it and be resilient because it will come, we need to cope with it),” she told the Philippine News Agency in a separate interview.

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The Marcos administration has been formulating ways to address the long-term impact of climate-related disasters, including through key government projects like flood control mitigation structures, construction of irrigation systems and rehabilitation initiatives for major river basins and dams.

The country suffered scores of casualties and billions of pesos worth of damage in properties when six tropical cyclones battered several provinces in a span of two months, the last Super Typhoon Pepito that hit Luzon hardest.

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TAGS: PAGASA, Philippines, Typhoon

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