Inquirer.net on MSN
Tuesday weather forecast: Rain expected in Palawan, eastern Luzon
MANILA, Philippines — The effects of the shear line and a low pressure area (LPA) will trigger rin showers in Palawan and the eastern part of Luzon on Tuesday, according to the state weather bureau.
The unusually long atmospheric river is forecast to bring heavy rain and high winds to Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and ...
A week after tropical cyclone Verbena traversed the Philippines, another weather disturbance is threatening to enter the ...
Inquirer.net on MSN
Rainy Monday in Luzon, parts of Visayas due to 4 weather systems
MANILA, Philippines – Luzon and parts of Visayas are forecast to experience rainy weather on Monday due to four weather ...
A strong-to-extreme atmospheric river stretches 7,000 miles from the Philippines to the Pacific Northwest this week, bringing ...
The severity of the situation is reflected in the extensive Tropical Cyclone Wind Signals (TCWS) now in effect. TCWS No. 1, ...
Google's AI models for flood and cyclone prediction are being deployed in a partnership between the Philippine weather agency PAGASA and Weathernews Inc. (WNI) to enhance extreme weather forecasting ...
VnExpress International on MSN
Tropical depression off Philippines to dissipate before reaching Vietnam
A tropical depression moving past the Philippines is forecast to weaken rapidly and is unlikely to affect Vietnam due to its ...
VnExpress International on MSN
New storm forecast to form off Philippine coast, likely to affect Vietnam
A tropical depression currently active east of the Philippines is expected to enter the East Sea within the next two to three ...
The Manila Times on MSN
LPA forecast to enter PAR as tropical depression in 24 to 48 hours
MANILA, Philippines – The cloud clusters have become a low pressure area (LPA) which now has a big chance of entering the ...
Koto was a tropical storm in the South China Sea Monday afternoon Indochina Time, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center said in ...
Looking at the weather map on his computer and seeing three simultaneous tropical storms forming across Asia in late November, climatologist Fredolin Tangang’s first thoughts drifted to the 2004 ...
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