Mapped: ‘Strongest storm on planet’ brings Asian cities to a standstill

Super Typhoon Ragasa, the strongest storm of this year, continues to churn towards China, bringing Hong Kong, Macau, and several other cities to a halt on Tuesday after battering the Philippines.

At least three people have been killed and thousands displaced as the typhoon triggered floods and landslides across the northern parts of the Philippines.

In northern Luzon, a 74-year-old man died after being trapped in a vehicle buried by mud and rocks in Benguet province, officials said. Two others were killed in Calayan town in Cagayan province, where the storm first made landfall.

Follow our live blog for the latest updates.

The disaster agency said more than 17,500 people were forced from their homes, while five others remain missing. Schools, government offices and transport services were suspended across 29 provinces, with ferries and domestic flights cancelled.

The storm – known locally as Nando – was packing maximum sustained winds of 215kmph and gusts up to 295kmph at landfall, according to the Philippine weather bureau PAGASA.

It has since moved west-northwest over the South China Sea and is forecast to strike southern China late Tuesday into Wednesday.

In Hong Kong, authorities raised the Signal 8 typhoon warning on Tuesday afternoon, the city’s third highest, closing schools and public offices and warning of hurricane-force winds and storm surges that could rival those seen during Super Typhoon Mangkhut in 2018.

Map shows path and arrival time (in Philippine Standard Time) of super typhoon Ragasa

Map shows path and arrival time (in Philippine Standard Time) of super typhoon Ragasa (PAGASA)

The Hong Kong airport said it will “continue operations” but warned passengers to expect “significant disruption” to flight operations from 6pm on Tuesday to Wednesday.

Around 700 flights have been cancelled, while ferries and some key highways are also shutting down, the South China Morning Post reported.

Analysis by The Independent of Flightradar24 data shows 86 regional departures to destinations in Asia have been grounded.

In addition, more than 30 long-haul departures are grounded, including two overnight flights to London Heathrow on Cathay Pacific and one on British Airways.

More than 100 flight departures from Hong Kong have been cancelled in just 10 hours, from 2pm to midnight local time on Tuesday afternoon and evening. An estimated 20,000 passengers are affected.

The Hong Kong Observatory said weather would “deteriorate rapidly” with “gale to storm-force winds” and high swells through Wednesday.

Photos and videos showed empty shelves in supermarkets as residents stockpiled essentials ahead of disruption.

The weather is expected to deteriorate rapidly later on Tuesday and the observatory said it will assess whether to issue a higher warning late on Tuesday or early Wednesday.

A shopper stands near near empty shelves at a supermarket ahead of Typhoon Ragasa in Shenzhen in southern China's Guangdong province

A shopper stands near near empty shelves at a supermarket ahead of Typhoon Ragasa in Shenzhen in southern China’s Guangdong province (AP)

Across the border, Chinese state media said mass evacuations were underway in Guangdong and Fujian provinces, with almost 400,000 people being moved. More than 10 cities in Guangdong, including technology hub Shenzhen and coastal city Zhuhai had suspended work, transport services and schools due to warnings of storm surges and high waves. Trains and flights into several coastal cities have been suspended, and schools were told to remain closed.

Taiwan‘s government has evacuated more than 7,600 people from mountainous southern and eastern areas, while transport disruptions continued for a second day on Tuesday with 273 flights cancelled and some rail services suspended.

Ragasa is expected to maintain its strength for the next 24 hours before weakening slightly as it makes landfall in southern China, forecasters said.

China’s National Meteorological Centre is forecasting that the typhoon will make landfall between the cities of Zhuhai and Zhanjiang in Guangdong on Wednesday afternoon.

On Tuesday morning, the storm was packing maximum sustained winds of 185kmph and gusts up to 230kmph, according to the Philippine weather agency PAGASA.

It was expected to continue maintaining its intensity over the next 24 hours before weakening slightly as it approaches the Chinese coast.

Super typhoon Ragasa as it develops and nears Hong Kong and mainland China

Super typhoon Ragasa as it develops and nears Hong Kong and mainland China (National Oceanic and Atmospheric)

Scientists warn storms in the region are becoming more intense as global temperatures rise, placing millions of people across Asia’s typhoon belt at increasing risk.

Forecasters said Ragasa was moving northwest at 15kmph over very warm waters, an environment primed to fuel further intensification.

Meteorologists warn that the system could bring storm surges similar to those caused by Typhoon Mangkhut, which inundated parts of Hong Kong in 2018.

Ragasa isn’t the only storm intensifying in the Pacific Ocean this week. Super Typhoon Neoguri also reached category 4 equivalent strength. The early Sunday morning visible satellite images revealed that both typhoons were very large and undergoing rapid intensification.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

2 hospital department heads arrested in Hong Kong over suspected fraud case

2 hospital department heads arrested in Hong Kong over suspected fraud case

Two department heads at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) hospital were arrested and dismissed last week in connection with suspected fraud through abuse of position, following a report by senior management to the city’s anti-corruption agency. In a statement on Tuesday, the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) confirmed it had received a corruption

Bernard Chan to succeed Henry Tang as chairman of Hong Kong’s West Kowloon arts hub

Bernard Chan to succeed Henry Tang as chairman of Hong Kong’s West Kowloon arts hub

Bernard Chan, vice-chairman of the board that manages Hong Kong’s arts hub in West Kowloon, will succeed Henry Tang Ying-yen as chairman on October 1, pledging to resolve its financial crisis by boosting revenue and commercialising operations. The West Kowloon Cultural District Authority announced on Tuesday that Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu had appointed Chan

Hong Kong car owners race to higher ground to escape Ragasa’s feared storm surge

Hong Kong car owners race to higher ground to escape Ragasa’s feared storm surge

Hongkongers were rushing to park their cars on higher ground and in covered spaces as Super Typhoon Ragasa was expected to inundate low-lying and coastal areas. Several major indoor car parks had long queues stretching out of their entrances on Tuesday morning, including the Tai Po Mega Mall car park, which accommodates over 1,000 vehicles,

Super Typhoon Ragasa Races Toward Hong Kong, Hundreds of ...

Super Typhoon Ragasa Races Toward Hong Kong, Hundreds of …

Airlines in East Asia canceled hundreds of flights on Tuesday as China’s Pearl River delta and the financial hub of Hong Kong braced for Super Typhoon Ragasa, which authorities have warned could have a “catastrophic” impact on the densely populated region. Why It Matters Meteorologists have warned that Ragasa, the most powerful typhoon to hit

Hong Kong property prices expected to trade sideways with fluctuations in the second half of the year; gold may remain strong until the first quarter of next year.

Hong Kong property prices expected to trade sideways with fluctuations in the second half of the year; gold may remain strong until the first quarter of next year.

Recently, Citi released its global investment outlook for the fourth quarter of 2025, outlining its views on Hong Kong’s property market, the US dollar, gold, and Hong Kong interest rates. According to Zhitong Finance APP, Citi recently released its global investment outlook for Q4 2025. Liao Jiahao, Head of Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation at

Super Typhoon Ragasa: Hongkongers rush home ahead of T8 as shutdown begins

Super Typhoon Ragasa: Hongkongers rush home ahead of T8 as shutdown begins

This story has been made freely available as a public service to our readers. Please consider supporting SCMP’s journalism by subscribing now for 50 per cent off during our two-day flash sale. The Hong Kong Observatory has said it will issue the No 8 warning signal 2.20pm on Tuesday as Super Typhoon Ragasa is expected

Map shows path and arrival time (in Philippine Standard Time) of super typhoon Ragasa

Super Typhoon Ragasa live tracker: Hong Kong cancels 700 flights after powerful storm kills three in Philippines

Hong Kong airport warns of ‘significant disruption’ as Ragasa nears Hong Kong airport said it will “continue operations” but warned passengers to expect “significant disruption” to flight operations from 6pm on Tuesday to Wednesday. In a statement issued on Monday evening, the Airport Authority Hong Kong (AAHK) said: “AAHK and the airport community are fully