Manila Standard - 2018 September 15 - Saturday

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VOL. XXXII • NO. 212 • 3 SECTIONS 16 PAGES • P18 • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2018 • www.manilastandard.net • editorial@manilastandard.net

‘Ompong’ blasts North By Rio N. Araja

B

Y NOON today, Typhoon “Ompong” had cut through the Caraballo mountains following a quick whip of heavily populated Northern Luzon en route to exiting by mid-afternoon the landmass westnorthwest of Laoag City, based on projections by the state weather bureau.

LAWIN

Despite this, Typhoon Signal No. 4 remains over a dozen provinces—Cagayan Province and Isabela, Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, Apayao, Abra, Kalinga, Mountain Province, Benguet, Ifugao, Nueva Vizcaya and Qurino—where Signal No. 3 had been in effect since last night. The Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) said “Ompong,” moving northwest at 30 kph, was to hit land between 1 am and 3 am Saturday, ramming into Cagayan and Isabela first. Next page

OMPONG

Facts and figures: Powerful storms Contrast of three surround eye of super typhoons Ompong—NASA HOW does “Ompong” compare to previous Super Typhoons “Lawin” (which occurred in 2016) and “Yolanda” (in 2013)? According to data from the Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical Astronomical Services Administration and the Joint Typhoon Warning Center:

YOLANDA

OMPONG

Maximum Sustained Winds: 255 kph Gustiness: 310 kph Diameter: 1,010 km Storm Surge Height: 6 meters Category: 5

LAWIN

Maximum Sustained Winds: 225 kph Gustiness: 315 kph Diameter: 800 km Storm Surge Height: 5 meters Category: 5

YOLANDA

Maximum Sustained Winds: 295 kph Gustiness: 360 kph Diameter: 600 km Storm Surge Height: 6 meters Category: 5

SATELLITES of the United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration trailing Typhoon “Ompong” (international name Mangkhut), the 15th to lash the Philippines, have found powerful storms surrounding its eye before its landfall over northern Luzon on Saturday. On Sept. 13 (Friday in Manila), the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer or MODIS instrument on the Aqua satellite looked at Ompong in infrared as it was approaching the Philippines, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center’s Rob Gutro said in a blog post. MODIS is a payload imaging

s e n sor built by Santa Barbara Remote Sensing that was launched into Earth orbit by NASA in 1999 on board the Terra Satellite, and in 2002 on board the Aqua satellite. According to the blog, the satellite’s instrument “found coldest cloud Next page

SAFEGUARDING THE GRAINS.

Farmers from the fourth class town of Mallig (population 30,000 plus) in Isabela collect and transport their harvested crops, already in sacks, by carabao-pulled sleds more than a dozen hours before the projected landfall of powerful Typhoon ‘Ompong,’ the 15th to breathe down on the country which averages 21 typhoons in a year. Richard de Guzman

Perfect storms: Hurricanes and typhoons AS HURRICANE Florence looms off the eastern United States and Typhoon “Mangkhut” threatens the Philippines, here are some facts about monster storms and what to expect as climate

change supercharges our weather. A cyclone by any other name Hurricanes, cyclones, and typhoons are different names for the same type of

giant tropical storms that form in oceans near the Americas and Asia. Bringing torrential rains, high winds, storm surges, and giant waves, the storms Next page

Florence batters US coast in ‘once in a lifetime event’ WILMINGTON, North Carolina— Hurricane Florence battered the Carolinas Friday with howling winds, lifethreatening storm surges and torrential rains as it came to close making landfall in what officials warned is a once in a lifetime event. Forecasters warned of catastrophic flooding and other mayhem from the Next page

ILL-BODING RAINS. Rains start to fall as the outer bands of Hurricane Florence make landfall in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina on Friday, with forecasters warning it’s packing a high-risk punch with 175 kph winds and torrential rains. AFP

Seized rice, other food items set for disaster relief By Julito G. Rada THE Bureau of Customs has been ordered to immediately turn over smuggled rice and other seized food items to the Department of Social Welfare and Development to augment preparations for the

onslaught of Typhoon “Ompong” this weekend. “Please release all seized rice and foodstuff in your possession to the DSWD for possible disaster relief,” Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III told Customs Commissioner Isidro Lapeña.

Dominguez’s directive was in response to President Rodrigo Duterte’s order to all government agencies to ensure the highest level of readiness for the powerful typhoon. Dominguez said government-togovernment transfers in emergency Next page


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