Thursday, 25 April 2019

Weeks after a 1,000 people were killed by Cyclone Idai Tropical Cyclone Kenneth is barreling toward Mozambique and could be the strongest storm ever recorded there


Tropical Cyclone Kenneth is about to bring destruction to Mozambique just weeks after a rare TC left a thousand dead. Image from Meteosat ctsy. EUMETSAT.

The experts are saying it will be the strongest storm ever recorded in the area and it comes just weeks after Cyclone Idai which battered south-east Africa and has affected millions of people with the death toll now above 1,000.
Kenneth will be the first tropical cyclone with the equivalent of hurricane strength to strike Mozambique's northern province of Cabo Delgado since modern record-keeping.
Kenneth has undergone rapid strengthening as is now an intense tropical cyclone with its strength equal to a Category 4 hurricane in the Atlantic or eastern Pacific oceans.
Hundreds of thousands of people are still in need of aid after Cyclone Idai battered Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi in March, according to Accuweather.
Tropical Cyclone Kenneth is barreling toward the Mozambique coastline just weeks after Idai sent a deadly storm surge into the country and drenched much of the region.
According to the Weather Channell, Kenneth slammed into the Comoro Islands – an archipelago with a population of nearly 1 million people, located between the African mainland and Madagascar – early Wednesday with wind-driven rainfall, storm surge and wind gusts as high as 145 mph.
Kenneth's eyewall continues to slam Grande Comore, a volcanic island that is home to Comoros' capital city of Moroni, which has a population of 400,000. 
Wind gusts as high as 145 mph may be impacting the island.
Kenneth is moving briskly toward the west in the Mozambique Channel toward the northern Mozambique coast. 

Credit NOAA

This motion is expected to slow somewhat as Kenneth approaches the coast.
Kenneth could become a Category 4-equivalent cyclone for a time overnight into early Thursday, but as Kenneth approaches the coast, it may lose some strength as it pulls in some drier air.

The Aftermath of Tropical Cyclone Idai

Tropical Cyclone Idai made landfall on March 14 as a Category 2 storm with 110-mph winds just north of Beira, Mozambique (population 530,000), near the time of high tide, driving a devastating storm surge into the city. 
Idai also caused enormous wind damage, ripping off hundreds of roofs in Mozambique’s fourth-largest city. 
Since the cyclone was large and moving slowly at landfall, near 6 mph, it was a prodigious rainmaker, with satellite-estimated rainfall amounts in excess of 2 feet in portions of central Mozambique.
The official death toll for Idai on April 23 stood at 1,007


MOZAMBIQUE
Cyclone Idai made landfall on the night of March 14, near the port city of Beira, bringing heavy winds and rains. 

Two major rivers, the Buzi and the Pungue, burst their banks, submerging villages and leaving bodies floating in the water.

People killed: 602

People injured: 1,641

Houses damaged or destroyed: 239,682

Crops damaged: 715,378 hectares

People affected: 1.85 million

Confirmed cholera cases: 4,979

Confirmed cholera deaths: 8

ZIMBABWE
On March 16, the storm hit eastern Zimbabwe, where it flattened homes and flooded communities in the Chimanimani and Chipinge districts.

People killed: 344

People injured: 200

People displaced: 16,000 households

People affected: 250,000

MALAWI
Before it arrived, the storm brought heavy rains and flooding to the lower Shire River districts of Chikwawa and Nsanje in Malawi’s south. The rains continued after the storm hit, compounding the misery of tens of thousands of people.

People killed: 60

People injured: 672

People displaced: 19,328 households

People affected: 868,895

Hurricanes and cyclones

Front Page


No comments: