10/11/2013
— Super Cyclone Phailin — 195mph (315kph) max wind gusts! Heading
towards India
The
already large Indian Ocean Cyclone (named Phailin) has now been
upgraded to a SUPER-Cyclone.
Super
Cyclone Phailin’ heading west towards India.
___________
This
cyclone has sustained winds currently at 155mph (250kph) , gusts up
to 195mph (315kph) !
This
is absolutely a huge storm. Lets hope it loses energy before
landfall.
Current
feed from NOAA / METSAT here:
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/floaters/02B/imagery/rbtop-animated.gif
Today
Oct 11th into 11th, 2013:
Cyclone
Phailin 'may be worse than Katrina' that hit US in 2005
11 October, 2013
NEW
DELHI: The weather office may be underestimating the severity of a
cyclone which is hurtling towards the east coast, a meteorologist
warned on Friday, adding that it could be worse than Hurricane
Katrina
which devastated parts of the
United States
in 2005.
Cyclone
Phailin
is forecast to hit the coast between Kalingapatnam in Andhra
Pradesh
and Paradip in Odisha late on Saturday with a maximum wind speed of
220kmph (135mph), the India
Meteorological Department
(IMD) said in its latest bulletin.
However,
both London-based Tropical Storm and the US navy's Joint Typhoon
Warning Centre forecast winds reaching 315kmph (195mph) on landfall,
classifying Phailin as a Category 5 storm — the most powerful .
"Phailin
is already worse than what the
IMD
is forecasting. A recent satellite
estimate put Phailin's current intensity on par with 2005's Hurricane
Katrina in the United States," said Eric Holthaus, meteorologist
for Quartz, a US-based online magazine which covers global
economy-related issues.
"Everything
I know as a meteorologist tells me this is the equivalent of a
Category 5 hurricane — among the strongest on earth in 2013. That
would mean Phailin could be the strongest cyclone ever measured in
the Indian Ocean."
Hurricane
Katrina hit the US Gulf coast on August 29, 2005, killing more than
1,800 people, driving 2.16 million from their homes and causing $75
billion of damage.
Cyclones
in the Bay
of Bengal
are common at this time of year, often causing deaths, mass
evacuations of coastal villages, power and telecoms disruptions and
widespread damage to crops and property in eastern India and
Bangladesh.
Some
experts have compared Phailin with a super cyclone in 1999 that
killed 10,000 people when it battered the coast of Odisha with wind
speeds reaching 300kmph (185mph).
Weather
authorities were reluctant to make comparisons with Katrina and the
1999 cyclone, dismissing reports that Phailin is half the size of
India.
"It
is very difficult to compare two cyclones and their possible impacts.
They are different entities and their crossing point along the coast
matters a lot. At the same time, there is a resemblance in terms of
intensity, so there is some similarity with the 1999 cyclone,"
IMD director general LS Rathore told a news conference.
The
cyclone is pretty voluminous, but it's not half the size of the
country and its radius keeps increasing and decreasing."
Millions
affected
Holthaus
said he was not familiar with India's level of disaster preparedness
but was concerned that any underestimation of the storm's intensity
could put lives at risk.
"I
feel that IMD's underestimate of the strength and impact of this
storm is potentially tragic and could catch many millions of people
off guard," he said. "Anything short of a full-scale
motivation may leave people stranded in flood waters. The highest
possible precautions should be taken immediately."
The
cyclone could disrupt the lives of millions, the Global Disaster
Alert and Coordination System (GDACS) run by the United
Nations
and the European
Commission
said.
"Up
to 6.1 million people can be affected by wind speeds of cyclone
strength or above. In addition, 47,000 people are living in coastal
areas below 5 metres above sea level and can be affected by storm
surge," the GDACS website said.
Authorities
began moving thousands of people living along Odisha's coastline to
shelters early on Friday, as weather officials warned of extensive
damage to homes, power and telecoms disruptions and flooding.
The
local government cancelled workers' holidays during the popular Hindu
festival of Dussehra to help prepare for the storm, and the Army,
Navy and Air
Force
have been put on standby for rescue and relief operations.
Rations
are being prepositioned in cyclone shelters, schools and other
buildings on higher ground, control rooms set up and fishing
suspended.
Aid
workers said the authorities' level of disaster preparedness and
early warnings looked satisfactory.
"There
has been a phenomenal change in disaster management in Odisha since
the super cyclone in 1999. The action the leadership has taken is
exactly what is needed," said Unni Krishnan, head of disaster
response for Plan
International
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