Third major storm in two weeks due to hit Hong Kong by Sunday, weather officials say
A
tracking map from the Hong Kong Observatory shows a typhoon making
landfall on Sunday afternoon
SCMP,
1
September, 2017
The
Hong Kong Observatory will consider issuing a tropical cyclone signal
No 1 on Friday as a tropical depression moves closer to the city.
Acting
senior scientific officer Pan Chi-kin said on Thursday: “When the
tropical cyclone takes on a more definite northerly track and it gets
closer to the coast of Guangdong, the Observatory will consider
issuing the standby signal No 1 during the day [on Friday],” he
said.
Pan
said it was too early to tell if the Observatory would issue a
warning signal No 8 or above this weekend, saying it would depend on
the path the cyclone takes as it approaches Guangdong and the Pearl
River Estuary.
Meanwhile,
neighbouring Macau’s weather authority issued a typhoon alert
signal No 1 at 7pm on Thursday.
A
map from the National Meteorological Centre predicted a typhoon near
Hong Kong on Sunday morning, while a tracking map from the Hong Kong
Observatory showed a typhoon making landfall in the afternoon on the
east of the city on the same day.
The
Observatory issued a thunderstorm warning at 5.30pm on Thursday,
which would be valid till 7.30pm. Isolated thunderstorms are expected
over the New Territories.
Waves
crashing into Central Harbourfront as Typhoon Hato struck Hong Kong
on August 23. Photo: Nora Tam
The
Hong Kong Observatory said on its website that the area of low
pressure over the northeastern part of the South China Sea has
intensified into a tropical depression.
“At
4pm, the tropical depression was centred about 270 kilometres
east-southeast of Dongsha,” the website read.
The
Observatory said the tropical cyclone over the northeastern part of
the South China Sea is expected to be slow moving at first, and move
in the general direction of eastern Guangdong to the Pearl River
Estuary afterwards.
“Weather
over the region will become unsettled with heavy squally showers over
the weekend and early next week,” the weather authority added.
Last
week, Hong Kong’s official forecaster issued a No 10 signal
for Typhoon
Hato –
the strongest in the local typhoon warning system – bringing the
city to a standstill. In nearby casino hub Macau,
10 people were killed and at least 240 injured by the typhoon.
Over
the weekend, the Observatory issued a No 8 warning for Severe
Tropical Storm Pakhar,
whichforced
hundreds of flights to
be cancelled or delayed as it smashed the city.
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