MANILA, Philippines – Storm Tino (Kalmaegi) made its sixth landfall in Palawan’s Cuyo Islands at 7:30 pm on Tuesday, November 4, particularly within the municipality of Magsaysay.
As of 10 pm, Tino was already over the coastal waters of Araceli, Palawan, shifting west at 25 kilometers per hour (km/h).
The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Companies Administration (PAGASA) stated in a briefing previous 11 pm that Tino may make one other landfall within the northern portion of Palawan by early Wednesday morning, November 5, earlier than rising over the West Philippine Sea.
The hurricane barely weakened on Tuesday night, with its most sustained winds easing from 130 km/h to 120 km/h. Its gustiness is now as much as 165 km/h from 180 km/h.
However PAGASA stated Tino is prone to re-intensify within the coming days, “and will attain its peak depth whereas over the West Philippine Sea.”
This has been Tino’s path, to date:
Monday, November 3
Tuesday, November 4
- first landfall in Silago, Southern Leyte (12 am)
- moved over Leyte
- handed near Cebu’s Camotes Islands
- second landfall in Borbon, Cebu (5:10 am)
- third landfall in Sagay Metropolis, Negros Occidental (6:40 am)
- fourth landfall in San Lorenzo, Guimaras (11:10 am)
- fifth landfall in Iloilo Metropolis, Iloilo (1:20 pm)
- moved over Vintage
- sixth landfall in Magsaysay, Cuyo Islands, Palawan (7:30 pm)
Though Tino has weakened a bit, it’s nonetheless carrying doubtlessly harmful winds. These are the areas below tropical cyclone wind alerts as of 11 pm on Tuesday:
Sign No. 4
Storm-force winds (118 to 184 km/h), important to extreme risk to life and property
- northernmost a part of Palawan (El Nido, Taytay, Araceli) together with Calamian and Cuyo Islands
Sign No. 3
Storm-force winds (89 to 117 km/h), reasonable to important risk to life and property
- northern a part of Palawan (Dumaran, San Vicente, Roxas)
- northeasternmost a part of Aklan (Buruanga, Malay)
- Vintage together with Caluya Islands
Sign No. 2
Gale-force winds (62 to 88 km/h), minor to reasonable risk to life and property
- southwestern a part of Romblon (Santa Fe, Santa Maria, Looc, Alcantara, Odiongan, San Jose, Ferrol)
- southern a part of Oriental Mindoro (Bulalacao, Mansalay, Roxas, Bongabong)
- southern a part of Occidental Mindoro (Magsaysay, San Jose, Rizal, Calintaan)
- central a part of Palawan (Puerto Princesa Metropolis) together with Cagayancillo Islands
- remainder of Aklan
- central and western components of Capiz (Sapi-an, Ivisan, Ma-ayon, Cuartero, Dumalag, Panitan, Sigma, Roxas Metropolis, Dao, Mambusao, Dumarao, Jamindan, Tapaz)
- central and western components of Iloilo (Calinog, New Lucena, Maasin, Oton, Pavia, Dueñas, Barotac Nuevo, Guimbal, Iloilo Metropolis, Tigbauan, Anilao, San Miguel, Leon, Mina, Santa Barbara, Barotac Viejo, Leganes, Dingle, Zarraga, Bingawan, Cabatuan, Alimodian, Dumangas, San Joaquin, San Rafael, San Enrique, Badiangan, Banate, Passi Metropolis, Pototan, Lambunao, Lemery, Tubungan, Igbaras, Janiuay, Miagao)
- Guimaras
- central and southern components of Negros Occidental (Isabela, La Carlota Metropolis, Candoni, Bago Metropolis, Enrique B. Magalona, Sipalay Metropolis, Valladolid, San Enrique, Ilog, Kabankalan Metropolis, Hinigaran, Bacolod Metropolis, La Castellana, Moises Padilla, Cauayan, Murcia, Binalbagan, Silay Metropolis, Pulupandan, Himamaylan Metropolis, Hinoba-an, Victorias Metropolis, Talisay Metropolis, Pontevedra)
Sign No. 1
Sturdy winds (39 to 61 km/h), minimal to minor risk to life and property
- remainder of Occidental Mindoro together with Lubang Island
- remainder of Oriental Mindoro
- southern a part of Marinduque (Buenavista, Gasan)
- remainder of Romblon
- western a part of Masbate (Mandaon, Milagros, Balud, Cawayan, Placer, Esperanza)
- southern a part of Palawan (Aborlan, Quezon, Narra, Sofronio Española) and Kalayaan Islands
- Cebu together with Bantayan Islands
- remainder of Iloilo
- remainder of Capiz
- Negros Oriental
- remainder of Negros Occidental
The surge of the northeast monsoon or amihan, the shear line, and the trough or extension of the hurricane are additionally bringing sturdy to gale-force gusts to areas not below a wind sign in these areas and provinces:
Wednesday, November 5
- Luzon, Western Visayas, Negros Island Area, Central Visayas, Biliran, Leyte, Zamboanga Peninsula
Thursday, November 6
- Ilocos Area, Batanes, Cagayan together with Babuyan Islands, most of Cordillera Administrative Area, Central Luzon, Metro Manila, Calabarzon, Mimaropa
Palawan and Vintage are anticipated to have intense to torrential rain within the coming hours, whereas greater than two dozen different provinces are nonetheless prone to see both reasonable to heavy rain or heavy to intense rain on account of Tino.
Tuesday night, November 4, to Wednesday night, November 5
- Intense to torrential rain (above 200 millimeters): Palawan, Vintage
- Heavy to intense rain (100-200 mm): Negros Occidental, Aklan, Capiz, Iloilo, Guimaras, Occidental Mindoro, Oriental Mindoro, Romblon
- Reasonable to heavy rain (50-100 mm): Camarines Norte, Camarines Sur, Batangas, Rizal, Quezon, Catanduanes, Albay, Sorsogon, Marinduque, Masbate, Cebu, Bohol, Negros Oriental, Siquijor, Lanao del Sur, Misamis Occidental, Zamboanga del Norte, Lanao del Norte
Wednesday night, November 5, to Thursday night, November 6
- Heavy to intense rain (100-200 mm): Palawan
- Reasonable to heavy rain (50-100 mm): Occidental Mindoro, Oriental Mindoro, Vintage
PAGASA had stated on Tuesday afternoon that the trough of the hurricane is inflicting scattered rain and thunderstorms in Metro Manila, Calabarzon, a lot of Bicol, and parts of Mindanao, whereas the shear line is affecting just a few provinces in Luzon.
Because of the shear line, specifically, these 4 provinces may nonetheless get reasonable to heavy rain:
Tuesday night, November 4, to Wednesday night, November 5
- Reasonable to heavy rain (50-100 mm): Isabela, Aurora, Bulacan
Wednesday night, November 5, to Thursday night, November 6
- Reasonable to heavy rain (50-100 mm): Quezon
The climate bureau added that there’s nonetheless a excessive danger of “life-threatening and damaging” storm surges with peak heights exceeding 3 meters in Oriental Mindoro, Occidental Mindoro, Palawan, Capiz, Vintage, Iloilo, Guimaras, and Negros Occidental inside 24 hours. Examine the particular cities and municipalities right here.
Reasonable to very tough sea circumstances additionally persist throughout the nation.
As much as very tough seas (journey is dangerous for all vessels)
- Seaboards of northern Palawan together with Calamian and Cuyo Islands; western and southern seaboards of Occidental Mindoro; southern seaboard of Oriental Mindoro – waves as much as 6 meters excessive
- Seaboard of Vintage; western seaboard of Aklan – waves as much as 5 meters excessive
- Seaboard of Cagayancillo Islands; southern seaboard of Iloilo; western seaboards of Negros Occidental and Guimaras – waves as much as 4.5 meters excessive
As much as tough seas (small vessels shouldn’t enterprise out to sea)
- Seaboards of Cagayan, Isabela, and Aurora; southern seaboard of Romblon; remaining seaboard of Aklan – waves as much as 4 meters excessive
- Seaboards of Batanes, Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, and Camarines Norte; northern seaboards of Camarines Sur; northern and jap seaboards of Polillo Islands and Catanduanes – waves as much as 3.5 meters excessive
- Seaboards of La Union, Zambales, and Kalayaan Islands; jap seaboards of Camarines Sur, Albay, Sorsogon, Jap Samar, and Davao Oriental; western seaboards of Pangasinan, Bataan, and remainder of mainland Palawan; southwestern seaboard of Negros Oriental; northern and jap seaboards of Northern Samar; remaining seaboard of Catanduanes – waves as much as 3 meters excessive
As much as reasonable seas (small vessels ought to take precautionary measures or keep away from crusing, if potential)
- Seaboard of Zamboanga del Norte; western seaboard of Masbate; jap seaboards of Oriental Mindoro, Dinagat Islands, Siargao Island, Bucas Grande Island, and Surigao del Sur; remaining seaboards of Quezon, Camarines Sur, Albay, Marinduque, and Romblon – waves as much as 2.5 meters excessive
- Seaboards of Batangas, Northern Mindanao, and Davao Occidental; remaining seaboards of Pangasinan, Mimaropa, Bicol, Visayas, and Caraga – waves as much as 2 meters excessive
Tino — the Philippines’ twentieth tropical cyclone for 2025, and the primary for November — could go away the Philippine Space of Duty (PAR) by Wednesday night or early Thursday morning, November 6.
However one other tropical cyclone may enter PAR simply a few days after Tino’s exit.
PAGASA is monitoring a tropical melancholy that shaped outdoors PAR on Tuesday, final noticed 1,690 kilometers east of northeastern Mindanao as of 10 pm. It’s shifting west southwest at 20 km/h, nonetheless with most sustained winds of 55 km/h and gustiness of as much as 70 km/h.
The tropical melancholy may enter PAR as a hurricane on Friday night, November 7, or Saturday, November 8, and could be given the native title Uwan.
Inside PAR, it could intensify additional into a brilliant hurricane.

PAGASA reiterated that the potential for the long run Uwan making landfall is “changing into extra possible,” however “the precise landfall location and time stay extremely unsure, contemplating that the forecast is greater than 5 days forward.” Updates can be given in succeeding advisories.
The climate bureau expects two or three tropical cyclones to kind inside or enter PAR throughout November. – Rappler.com

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