Tropical Disturbance 90w is spinning up at
4°N 151°E, and has a
50% chance of becoming a Tropical Depression.
Sea surface temperatures below the disturbance is warm, at 30°C, which will increase its chance of further intensification
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New post on Westernpacificweather.comIts Monday January 6th and this week is going to be interesting for the tropics of the western pacific as we continue to monitor Invest 90W, a tropical wave south of Guam that poses the risk of bringing foul weather to the Philippines during the coming weekend.
As of writing this update this area remains an elongated trough of low pressure with little organization. Yet convection remains robust in its core and with atmospheric conditions supportive of possibly weak tropical development the chance of this now weak low becoming a named storm is at least moderate to possibly high at this time.
GFS is just one of the many global weather models we look at, only this one has been fairly accurate this past season in predicting the formation of storms. Shown in the image below a Tropical Storm is being picked up by Saturday Noon Time. Note how far north the wind field extend.
The problem with this is that gale force winds could be seen in Northern Luzon bringing rough waves up and down coastline. This along with persistent showers possibly in Visayas could pose the risk of low lying flash flooding and a chance of landslides this coming weekend. Now is the time if you have friends in weak shelters in the area or are in flood prone areas to make sure you are ready for heavy rainfall.
GFS 5 day Outlook
A SUPER TYPHOON WILL NOT OCCUR and never was expected nor have ever occurred in the month of January. But heavy rain showers that could cause flooding by the weekend is developing. The areas highest at risk will be eastern Sea Boards of Southern Luzon, Visayas (including Haiyan hit areas) and Northern Mindanao. Yet showers will extend farther inland.
Beyond that details are going to be limited as our storm is still in its genesis phase and predicting where exactly and when exactly something might occur without even having a low pressure system developed is quite hard. Thanks to modern technology and modern improvements with numerical model forecasting are we able to look ahead and see this risk well in advance.
The down side though is the farther we look the more inaccurate a numerical model forecast becomes. Furthermore some of the general public who has little to no meteorological knowledge and who has access to global models and when they see a strong storm developing nearly two weeks out in the forecast a few may tend to share that observation with people inciting panic and predicting a Super Typhoon when in reality no STY has ever occurred in January and no models were suggesting one to happen. (This is what happened last week with the Super Typhoon Confusion) Always remember if someone chooses to remain anonymous without providing details about their Meteorological expertise then the chances are they have none.
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