Satellite view of Typhoon Uwan strengthening near the eastern Philippines, with swirling clouds and storm warnings for Catanduanes and Samar Island.
Satellite view of Typhoon Uwan strengthening near the eastern Philippines, with swirling clouds and storm warnings for Catanduanes and Samar Island.
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Typhoon Uwan strengthens, raises signal no. 2 in eastern Philippines

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Typhoon Uwan (Fung-wong) intensified further as PAGASA raised Signal No. 2 over Catanduanes and parts of Samar Island at 5 a.m. on Saturday, November 8. It was located 985 kilometers east of Eastern Visayas with maximum sustained winds of 130 km/h. The storm is projected to become a super typhoon by Saturday evening or Sunday morning.

On Friday, November 7, Uwan intensified from a severe tropical storm to a typhoon around 8 p.m. and entered the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) around 10 p.m. PAGASA reported it was positioned 1,045 kilometers east of Eastern Visayas, moving west-northwest at 20 km/h with maximum sustained winds of 120 km/h and gustiness up to 150 km/h.

By 4 a.m. Saturday, it strengthened to 130 km/h with gusts reaching 160 km/h, accelerating to 25 km/h. Signal No. 2 was raised over Catanduanes; eastern and central Northern Samar (including Lope de Vega, Palapag, and others); northeastern Samar (Matuguinao, San Jose de Buan); and northern Eastern Samar (Maslog, San Policarpo, and others). This indicates winds of 62 to 88 km/h posing minor to moderate threats to life and property.

Signal No. 1 covers wide areas of Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao, including Cagayan, Isabela, Metro Manila, Quezon, Camarines provinces, and many more. The highest signal could reach No. 5.

Uwan, the 21st tropical cyclone of 2025 and second in November, entered the PAR less than 48 hours after the deadly Typhoon Tino exited. It is forecast to make landfall over southern Isabela or northern Aurora late Sunday evening or early Monday morning, November 10, near its peak intensity. Afterward, it will traverse Northern Luzon and emerge over the West Philippine Sea.

The typhoon will bring heavy rain: intense to torrential (over 200 mm) in Camarines provinces, Catanduanes, and others on Sunday; and in Northern Luzon on Monday. High risk of storm surges exceeding 3 meters in Isabela, Aurora, Quezon, and Bicol region. Seas will be very rough up to 14 meters in some areas, risky for vessels.

The government has prepared evacuations, relief supplies, and alerts for agencies like DSWD, PNP, and PCG. Classes are suspended in Baguio and Dagupan on Monday, with Cebu Pacific canceling flights.

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Satellite view of Tropical Storm Hagupit swirling over the Pacific east of the Philippines, with dense clouds and storm patterns.
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The tropical storm Hagupit may enter the Philippine area of responsibility between Saturday evening and Sunday morning, according to the state weather bureau. Once inside, it will be given the local name Caloy. The system is currently located far east of Mindanao and is not expected to directly affect the country in the next three days.

Tropical Storm Hagupit is expected to enter the Philippine area of responsibility on Saturday and will be locally named Caloy. The state weather bureau said the storm has a high chance of weakening once it reaches the Philippine Sea.

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The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) announced on March 19 that it has retired seven local names of tropical cyclones from 2025 due to extensive devastation. These storms caused 373 deaths, 680 injuries, and over P36 billion in damages, according to the Office of Civil Defense. Tino and Uwan were among the most destructive.

The Intertropical Convergence Zone is forecast to bring cloudy skies and scattered rains with thunderstorms to parts of southern Mindanao on Monday, May 18, according to Pagasa.

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A magnitude 5.3 earthquake struck waters northwest of Dalupiri Island in Cagayan early Thursday morning, according to state seismologists.

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