Super Typhoon Bavi: Northern Mariana Islands assess damage from strongest storm on record
Super Typhoon Bavi struck Rota with Category 5 winds of around 180 mph. No deaths confirmed, but damage is severe — and Taiwan is next in the storm's path.
Its name is Bavi and it has entered the record books for the worst possible reason: it is the strongest storm ever recorded on the island of Rota, in the Northern Mariana Islands, a US territory in the Pacific. The super typhoon’s eye passed over the island on Monday morning local time with sustained winds of around 180 mph — the equivalent of a Category 5 hurricane, the top of the scale.
How bad is the damage from Super Typhoon Bavi?
Authorities on Rota report widespread “major damages”, though patchy communications mean the full picture is still emerging. On neighbouring Guam, which was also battered, buildings are down, streets are flooded and power lines litter the ground; close to a hundred FEMA officials are on the ground. The good news, for now: no deaths have been confirmed on Guam or in the Marianas.
There is an extra layer of cruelty to this one. The region was still recovering from Super Typhoon Sinlaku, which in April left residents living in tents and houses with makeshift roofs — many rode out Bavi in exactly that condition. It is the kind of back-to-back battering climate scientists have long warned will become more common in a warmer Pacific, in the same week that the WHO’s European arm started treating extreme heat as a public health emergency on the other side of the world.
Where is Typhoon Bavi heading now?
Weakened but still dangerous, Bavi is now tracking towards Taiwan, where authorities are bracing for torrential rain and violent surf in the coming days. Official warnings and the updated track are at the US National Weather Service.
Image: Wikimedia Commons (public domain)