Super Typhoon Mawar lashes Guam as a Category 4 with ferocious winds, knocking out power for thousands

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Super Typhoon Mawar slammed into Guam as a Category 4 storm on Wednesday, bringing hurricane-force winds and heavy rain and marking the strongest storm to hit the US Pacific territory in decades.

Mawar passed through the Rota Channel cutting through the northern part of Guam before 9 p.m. local time with warnings in effect for winds of 115 mph or greater until 10:45 p.m. for tornado-like damage, the National Weather Service in Guam saying.

The typhoon’s eyewall passed over the northern tip of Guam around 8:45 p.m. Wednesday night with winds of 145 mph, the National Weather Service said.

Mawar lies just 15 miles to the north, northeast of Guam, moving northwest at 8 mph, according to the latest typhoon advisory.

“This is an extremely dangerous and life-threatening situation,” Landon Aydlett, warning coordinator for the National Weather Service, said in a live broadcast Wednesday night local time.

He warned locals to “take cover now” away from windows, with conditions expected to gradually ease Thursday morning local time.

So far, the typhoon has hit the northern tip of Guam. It is the strongest storm to hit the territory of more than 150,000 people in decades, The Associated Press informed.

The storm has already knocked out power to tens of thousands. The island-wide power system was providing power to nearly 1,000 of its 52,000 customers, Guam Power Authority Wednesday afternoon local time.

Fierce winds and torrential rain began to lash the island on Wednesday local time. The storm is potentially so severe that President Joe Biden signed an emergency declaration Tuesday to mobilize resources.

Mawar is expected to be a “triple threat” of torrential rains, life-threatening storm surge and Category 4 hurricane force winds, according to Guam’s Department of Homeland Security.

“This is a very serious situation with constantly deteriorating conditions,” the department said.

Aydlett, of the National Weather Service, said in a live broadcast Wednesday afternoon local time: “Everyone is going to feel this, and they’re going to feel it for a while,” urging people to stay inside.

Typhoon warnings have been issued for Guam and Rota. Typhoon-force winds extended 50 miles from the center of the storm, and tropical storm-force winds reached up to 140 miles from the center, the weather service said in an update at 1 p.m. local time.

Satellite image showing Typhoon Mawar approaching Guam.NASA via AP

Loss of power and access to water is likely to last for days, if not weeks, after the storm passes. The flights were canceled from Tuesday to Wednesday, according to the island’s national security.

mawar was It is expected to be the first “ocular step” on Guam since December 2002, the weather service said. Approximately 170,000 people live there.

That storm was Super Typhoon Pongsona, which had sustained winds of 144 mph and caused an estimated $700 million in damage, according to a NOAA report.

Luis Zamora, 40, is an electrical engineer who frequently visits the island from California for his work with the US military and is taking refuge in a hotel with his colleagues. He was scheduled to leave on Thursday, but on Tuesday he received notification from United Airlines that his flight was cancelled.

“Overnight, you can definitely see the difference in the wind,” Zamora said. “You can hear it much louder…you can see the trees moving.”

Originally from Florida, Zamora has prepared the same way he would for a hurricane: a bathtub full of water, charging his devices before a power outage and stocking up on non-perishables. He also trusts the staff at his hotel, the Dusit Beach Resort, who have assured guests of their food stock and emergency plans.

“I think Guam is way ahead of, you know, storm preparedness,” Zamora said. “It’s just that the result is something you can’t really prepare for.”

Zamora and her colleagues are just a 10-minute drive from the airport, but it’s unclear how quickly they could get home after the storm passes.

“It’s about how much damage it’s going to do and when everything is going to be able to work again.”

    Typhoon Mawar with potentially catastrophic winds was headed to hit Guam directly on Wednesday, May 24, a US territory in the Pacific that is a crucial US military outpost.
Tropical storm force winds blow into Tumon Bay, Guam on May 24, 2023.James Reynolds / AFP – Getty Images

Governor of Guam, Lou Leon Guerrero signed an executive order order evacuations from low-lying areas and mobilize the national guard to help get people to shelters. In a letter to Biden, Guerrero warned that the typhoon is expected to cause “substantial destruction on our island.”

“I anticipate that this situation will be of such severity and magnitude that an effective response will be beyond the capacity of the Government of Guam and supplemental federal assistance will be necessary to save lives and protect public property, health and safety, and mitigate the effects of this impending catastrophe,” Guerrero said in the letter, which was posted on Instagram.

In a speech on YouTube, Guerrero urged people to stay at home and take steps to prepare.

“I know it’s been a long time since we’ve had a storm of this magnitude and it’s terrifying,” Guerrero said. “I ask you to remain calm, stay informed and most importantly, be prepared.”

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