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SHAKE AND BLOW
Storm Amanda blamed for three deaths in Mexico
by Staff Writers
Morelia, Mexico (AFP) May 29, 2014


Typhoon spawns new disaster center in Philippines
Manila (UPI) May 29, 2013 - A central command center to help the Philippines better cope with disaster response has been established by the government and IBM.

The new intelligent operations center, engendered as a consequence of last year's devastating typhoon Yolanda, was inaugurated Thursday in Quezon City by IBM and the Department of Science and Technology.

IBM had issued an Impact Grant of technology and services following the typhoon and delivered the center, which features an integrated communications.

"In the wake of Typhoon Yolanda, IBM teams in the U.S. and Philippines recognized both the enormity of the crisis and the opportunity to provide cutting-edge technology," said Mariels Almeda Winhoffer, president and country general manager of IBM Philippines. "These solutions will address the government's need for better decision-making support, and at the same time, provide a starting point to better manage future responses."

IBM said its integrated solution will pull data from disparate sources into a common view, giving emergency managers advance warning of extreme weather events, feedback from first responders on casualties and the condition of buildings, roads, and infrastructure for analytics and response planning.

Torrential rains from tropical storm Amanda claimed the lives of three people in Mexico, authorities said Wednesday.

Waters rushing down mountainsides caused flash floods that swept away two people in the town of Zitacuaro in the western state of Michoacan, said the state's director of civil protection, Nicolas Alfaro.

The fatalities were a 50-year-old man and a girl of eight.

Roads and cars were damaged, and authorities warned homes might need to be evacuated if the rains continued.

Amanda, located far off Mexico's Pacific coast, reached hurricane strength over the weekend before being downgraded.

In the neighboring state of Guerrero, one person died in a road accident blamed on the storm. A tree fell on a road and the man drove right into it, dying instantly.

Amanda was the first named storm of the season.

In 2013, Mexico was hit simultaneously by hurricanes Ingrid in the Gulf of Mexico and Manuel on the Pacific coast, with a toll of 157 dead.

Be prepared for hurricanes, despite calm forecast, NOAA warns
Miami (AFP) May 29, 2014 - Despite the quiet forecast for this year's hurricane season, the director of the Miami-based National Hurricane Center warned Thursday not to let guards down completely.

Rick Knabb, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's NHC, emphasized that even a single storm that hits land can have a huge impact.

He cautioned residents of all hurricane-prone areas, from the Caribbean to the United States, to be prepared, "because the consequences of not preparing are way too high."

Forecasters last week predicted the 2014 Atlantic hurricane season will be "near or below average," thanks to an expected El Nino phenomenon, with between eight and 13 tropical storms originating in the Atlantic Ocean, of which three to six could rise to hurricane strength.

But, "regardless of what the season forecast says, regardless of what 'El Nino' might do, regardless of how many years it has been since you've been impacted, you've got to prepare the same every year," Knabb said.

He stressed that seasonal forecasts -- which cover the period from June 1 to November 30 -- are not an exact science.

"Last year clearly showed that," Knabb said, referring to predictions of a more active than usual 2013 hurricane season, which ended up being the calmest on record since 1982.

"But even if we could issue a perfect seasonal forecast in terms of the overall number of hurricanes and storms, that still wouldn't tell you where the storms and hurricanes are going to go," he said.

Last week, the first named storm of the season became a category-four hurricane in the Pacific Ocean.

Although it remained far away from land, the storm sparked rains that have led to three deaths in Mexico. It has since been downgraded to a tropical depression.

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Related Links
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SHAKE AND BLOW
Be prepared for hurricanes, despite calm forecast, NOAA warns
Miami (AFP) May 29, 2014
Despite the quiet forecast for this year's hurricane season, the director of the Miami-based National Hurricane Center warned Thursday not to let guards down completely. Rick Knabb, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's NHC, emphasized that even a single storm that hits land can have a huge impact. He cautioned residents of all hurricane-prone areas, from the ... read more


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