CHINA> Regional
New tropical storm to bring gales, storms to south China
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-09-13 15:10

HAIKOU: Weather service in south China's Hainan Province warned of gales and heavy rains in the province in the coming three days, brought about by a new tropical storm that was formed early Sunday in seawaters north to Luzon of the Philippines.

The new storm, the 15th of the year, is yet to be named.

The Hainan Provincial Observatory forecast at 11 am Sunday the new tropical storm would arrive at seawaters off western Guangdong on Monday night, bringing strong winds and heavy rains to Hainan, which lies to the southwest of Guangdong, in the forthcoming three days.

Related readings:
New tropical storm to bring gales, storms to south China Tropical storm lands in  S China's island province
New tropical storm to bring gales, storms to south China Storm hits Shandong
New tropical storm to bring gales, storms to south China 1,000 still stranded as Taiwan storm aid arrives
New tropical storm to bring gales, storms to south China Families mourn hundreds of Taiwan's storm victims

New tropical storm to bring gales, storms to south ChinaStorm kills 6 in Hainan province

The Hainan weather service said the 15th tropical storm was located at 19 degrees north latitude and 120 degrees east longitude at 9 am Sunday, packing up strong winds with an instant speed of 64.8 kilometers per hour at its eye.

The new tropical storm will move northwestward at a speed of 10 km per hour and will further gain strength on the way before arriving in seawater off western Guangdong coast on Monday night, said the weather forecast.

All ports on Hainan Island gave alarms as of 11 am  Sunday to warn ship owners about advancing of the new tropical storm.

The new tropical storm followed on the heels of the Tropical storm Mujigae, which left Hainan two days ago. The storm brought economic losses of 56.43 million yuan ($8.3 million) to the province, and forced the evacuation of nearly 50,000 people. Influenced by the storm, some farm land, fish ponds, roads and water conservation systems were flooded.