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 Philippines Orders Emergency Shutdowns as Cyclone Tinoa Approaches
(MENAFN) Western Philippine provinces have enacted emergency shutdowns affecting education, government operations, and maritime transport as Tropical Cyclone Tino advances toward the archipelago, media confirmed Saturday.
Multiple municipalities across Capiz province in the Western Visayas region have ordered the closure of schools and government offices at every level starting Monday, according to media. The directives respond to mounting concerns over Tino's projected trajectory and intensification.
Maritime authorities have grounded all watercraft in Surigao del Norte province and connecting island passages. The Philippine Coast Guard imposed the travel ban as deteriorating ocean conditions accompany the system's west-northwest track toward Visayas.
Forecasters project the tropical depression will reach typhoon status within 72 hours of landfall.
Emergency protocols were activated following an official warning from the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa), which instructed communities to ready evacuation plans.
Pagasa data shows Tino remains outside the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) as a tropical depression but is forecast to cross into national territory Sunday. Current models indicate potential escalation to typhoon intensity by Tuesday morning.
 Multiple municipalities across Capiz province in the Western Visayas region have ordered the closure of schools and government offices at every level starting Monday, according to media. The directives respond to mounting concerns over Tino's projected trajectory and intensification.
Maritime authorities have grounded all watercraft in Surigao del Norte province and connecting island passages. The Philippine Coast Guard imposed the travel ban as deteriorating ocean conditions accompany the system's west-northwest track toward Visayas.
Forecasters project the tropical depression will reach typhoon status within 72 hours of landfall.
Emergency protocols were activated following an official warning from the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa), which instructed communities to ready evacuation plans.
Pagasa data shows Tino remains outside the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) as a tropical depression but is forecast to cross into national territory Sunday. Current models indicate potential escalation to typhoon intensity by Tuesday morning.
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