CLIMATE
2 min read
Thousands evacuate as tropical storm Fengshen nears Philippine coast
Authorities in the Philippines mandated the evacuation of high-risk areas ahead of tropical storm Fengshen, bringing strong winds and heavy rainfall.
Thousands evacuate as tropical storm Fengshen nears Philippine coast
Residents stay at tents set up at a makeshift evacuation centre in Manay, Davao Oriental, Philippines.
October 18, 2025

Thousands of residents of the Philippines left their homes along the Pacific coast on Saturday as weather experts warned of coastal flooding ahead of tropical storm Fengshen's landfall.

The storm was forecast to hit Catanduanes, an impoverished island of 270,000 people, late Saturday with gusts of up to 90 kilometres (56 miles) an hour, the government weather service said.

A second landfall is expected on the main island of Luzon on Sunday morning.

Fengshen will bring heavy rainfall, along with a "minimal to moderate risk" of coastal flooding from 1-2 metre (3-6 foot) waves being pushed ashore by the disturbance, the government weather service said.

RelatedTRT World - Another 6.2-magnitude earthquake jolts Philippines

Nearly 17,000 residents of the eastern province of Albay, along with more than 9,000 in nearby Catanduanes island, moved to safer ground, local disaster officials said.

The evacuations are a well-rehearsed routine in a region that is often the first major landmass struck by cyclones that form in the western Pacific Ocean.

The Catanduanes provincial government ordered local officials to "activate their respective evacuation plans" for residents of "high-risk areas" including the coast, low-lying communities and landslide-prone slopes, rescue official Gerry Rubio told AFP.

The Philippines is hit by around 20 storms and typhoons each year, which routinely strike areas where millions of people live in poverty.

RelatedTRT World - Powerful 7.4 magnitude earthquake strikes Philippines, triggering tsunami warning

Scientists warn that storms are becoming more powerful as the planet warms due to human-driven climate change.

Fengshen comes as the country reels from a series of major earthquakes that killed at least 87 people over the past three weeks.

SOURCE:AFP
Explore
Belgium's "credibility damaged" after the country abstained from EU climate vote: climate minister
Typhoon Kalmaegi's impact in Philippines continues with 114 dead and 127 missing
Brazil set to launch $125B forest fund to pay nations for keeping rainforests intact
Climate crisis now a 'humanitarian catastrophe,' IFRC warns before COP30
At least 50 dead as Caribbean digs out from Hurricane Melissa
In pictures: Hurricane Melissa leaves behind trail of destruction in Jamaica
Hurricane Melissa hits Cuba hours after devastating Jamaica
Floods kill at least 9, leave 5 missing in central Vietnam
In pictures: Hurricane Melissa takes aim at Cuba after laying waste to Jamaica
'Catastrophic situation!' — WMO warns Hurricane Melissa to be Jamaica's worst storm this century
India braces for Cyclone Montha by shutting schools and evacuating thousands
Mexico has missed its water repayment deadline to the US. Here's what could happen next?
US climate-disaster database, once scrapped by Trump, reveals record $101B losses up to mid-2025
Nature's unwelcome invasion: Mosquitoes make first-ever appearance in Iceland
Mexico flood disaster: Death toll rises to 64, dozens still missing
At least 42 dead, 27 missing as floods devastate central Mexico
China, India drive historic milestone as renewables generate more power than coal for first time
Dozens killed, missing as landslides and floods ravage Nepal
Dozens dead in Philippines quake as hospitals overflow
Death toll rises in Vietnam as typhoon Bualoi brings more destruction