Typhoon Uwan is rapidly gaining strength as it approaches the Philippines, raising alarms due to destructive winds, heavy rain, and potentially life-threatening conditions. Previously known as Fung-wong, the storm has intensified into a severe tropical storm and is nearing the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR).
As of Friday, the typhoon was located 1,470 kilometres east of Eastern Visayas, outside the PAR boundary. It carries maximum sustained winds of 95 km/h, with gusts up to 115 km/h, moving northwest at 10 km/h.
The storm is expected to enter the PAR by midnight or early Saturday, where it will be renamed Uwan, meaning "rain" in Cebuano. Forecasters predict it may make landfall near Northern or Central Luzon at or near peak intensity around 10 November 2025.
Forecasters warn, "Typhoon Uwan could become one of the most destructive storms of the year."
Disaster officials advise residents in the projected path to prepare urgently due to the expected severe impact.
Meteorologists highlight the storm's rapid intensification as a serious threat to large parts of Luzon, potentially causing life-threatening conditions. Early warnings for eastern Luzon and the Visayas are anticipated starting Saturday morning.
"Early warnings are expected to be raised as soon as Saturday morning for parts of eastern Luzon and the Visayas."
Author's summary: Typhoon Uwan is swiftly intensifying and heading toward the Philippines, posing a serious threat with destructive winds and heavy rain expected to impact Luzon by early November.