Typhoon Betty continues its westward course over the Philippine Sea, decelerating as it hovers east of Northern Luzon. The approaching typhoon has triggered various levels of advisories and warnings for regions under the Tropical Cyclone Wind Signal (TCWS).
The details surrounding Typhoon Betty’s trajectory, strength, and potential impact have been updated based on the latest available data:
The center of Typhoon Betty’s eye is estimated to be located approximately 715 km East of Tuguegarao City, Cagayan (17.3 °N, 128.5 °E).
Currently, the typhoon is moving westward at a speed of 15 km/h.
Betty is presenting with maximum sustained winds of 175 km/h near its center and gustiness that reaches up to 215 km/h.
The areas listed below are expected to experience strong winds within the next 36 hours and are thus placed under TCWS No. 1:
Forecast accumulated rainfall varies across regions and time periods:
From tomorrow morning to Tuesday morning:
From Tuesday morning to Wednesday morning:
From Wednesday morning to Thursday morning:
Betty is expected to continue on its west-northwest or northwest trajectory until tomorrow, gradually decelerating. By Tuesday, the typhoon will likely become slow-moving to almost stationary over the waters east of Batanes. It is then projected to move northward or north-northeastward by mid-Wednesday or Thursday towards the sea east of Taiwan.
Throughout the forecast period, Betty is expected to remain as a typhoon, although it is predicted to weaken gradually until Tuesday. A faster weakening rate may be observed as it moves northward or north-northeastward on Wednesday or Thursday due to increasingly unfavorable conditions. Betty may be downgraded to severe tropical storm category on late Thursday or early Friday.
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