Storm Maysak in Vietnam set to weaken into tropical depression within 24 hours


Forecast track of Storm Maysak over the coming days. — nchmf.gov.vn via Vietnam News/ANN

HANOI: Storm Maysak, designated as Storm No.1 in Vietnam, is on track to weaken into a tropical depression over southern China within 24 hours, forecasters said on Saturday (July 4), after brushing past the country's northern coast with winds up to level 8-9 (62-88km/h) on the Beaufort scale and gusts as strong as level 11 (103-117km/h).

The storm sat roughly 80km off Bach Long Vi, an island administered by the coastal city of Hai Phong, at 6am on Saturday, and about 180km from the border city of Mong Cai in the northern province of Quang Ninh.

It was creeping north-west at 15km/h, according to the National Centre for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting.

Forecasters expect the storm to pass just off Quang Ninh's coast by mid-afternoon, still at the same intensity, then bend north-northwest and push into China's Guangxi region overnight.

There, it would lose steam fast, dropping to level 7 (50-61km/h) winds by Sunday morning and dissolving into a weak low-pressure system by Monday.

Authorities have put the northern Gulf of Tonkin under a level 3 storm alert, covering the islands of Bach Long Vi, Van Don, Co To and Cat Hai, as well as coastal waters stretching from Quang Ninh down to Hung Yen.

Conditions are expected to turn hazardous offshore: winds gusting to level 11 (103-117km/h) and waves as high as four metres could easily flip or wreck fishing boats, cargo ships and tourist vessels.

Fish farms and harbours are also at risk, and forecasters expect fishing, shipping and tourism to grind to a halt in the storm's path.

Residents along the Quang Ninh, Hai Phong and Hung Yen coastline should brace for strong winds and a storm surge of up to 40cm starting around midday Saturday.

Forecasters warned the wind could tear off roofs, snap trees and knock out power and phone lines, while surging water threatens to flood low-lying areas near river mouths and put pressure on sea dikes.

Inland, the storm is expected to dump heavy rain across the north-east and Thanh Hoa Province through Sunday, generally 100 to 200mm, but as much as 300mm in the north-east, with isolated pockets seeing over 500mm.

That kind of rainfall raises the risk of urban flooding, flash floods and landslides, particularly in mountainous areas.

Forecasters also cautioned that thunderstorms and sudden strong gusts could strike both ahead of and during the storm's approach, and urged people in its path to stay alert to official updates. — Vietnam News/ANN

 

 

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Vietnam , Storm Maysak

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