-
Advertisement
Hong Kong weather
Hong KongSociety

Hong Kong back in business after Wipha as all typhoon signals lifted

Hongkongers can expect showers and squally thunderstorms over the next few days under the influence of the outer rainbands of Wipha

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
More than 700 reports of fallen trees were recorded as Wipha swept past Hong Kong. Photo: Sam Tsang
Jeffie Lam,Lorraine ChiangandJiang Chuqin
This story has been made freely available as a public service to our readers. Please consider supporting SCMP’s journalism by subscribing. New users who download our updated app get a seven-day free trial.

Hong Kong returned to normality on Monday morning as the Observatory lifted all storm warnings in the early hours after the departure of Typhoon Wipha, which triggered the highest-level No 10 warning over the weekend.

But the forecaster warned that the city would still be hit by showers and squally thunderstorms over the next few days under the influence of the outer rainbands of Wipha, which had now weakened into a tropical cyclone.

Advertisement

A No 8 typhoon signal or above was in force for 19 hours on Sunday, including seven hours for the No 10 hurricane warning, before the Observatory downgraded it to No 3 at 7.40pm. It was replaced with the No 1 signal at 3.20am before all warnings were cancelled at 5.10am on Monday.

Wipha, which is a woman’s name in Thai meaning “splendour” or “radiance”, was the fifth typhoon to trigger the No 10 signal in the past two decades. But the maximum average wind speed near its centre, 140km/h, was among the lowest.

Advertisement

Lee Shuk-ming, a senior scientific officer at the Observatory, said on Monday that the path of the typhoon tracked with the forecaster’s prediction.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x