Start the year right, synchronize or adjust our clock to Philippine Standard Time (PhST).
The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) is mandated by law, as the government agency which is tasked to keep and disseminate the Philippine Standard Time (PhST). Section 6 of Batas Pambansa Blg. 8, defining the metric system in the country, states that: "PAGASA shall be responsible in the establishment, maintenance and operation of the National Standard for the second of time".
Another law is Presidential Decree 1149, assigning PAGASA as the official agency that will handle the dissemination of the Philippine Standard Time (PST). Recently, the Philippine Standard Time Act was created. Later, its Implementing Rules and Regulations was also created.
http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/index.php/astronomy/philippine-standard-time#philippine-standard-time
Everything is free just look for it
Showing posts with label pagasa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pagasa. Show all posts
Sunday, January 1, 2017
Tuesday, February 9, 2016
National Astronomy Week
The National Astronomy Week (NAW) is an annual event being observed every third week of February by virtue of Presidential Proclamation No.130. This year, the occasion will be celebrated on 15-19 February 2016 with the theme “Updating the Skills of Personnel from PAGASA Regional Services Division (PRSD) in Understanding Astronomical Events”

Press Release : http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/index.php/28-astronomy/424-sky-this-month
Everything is free just look for it
Press Release : http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/index.php/28-astronomy/424-sky-this-month
Everything is free just look for it
Sunday, June 14, 2015
Giving Hope to the PAGASA of the Nation: The PAGASA Modernization Act
In one sentence, this bill is about giving hope to PAGASA.
Whether we live in a place that sizzles in May or is submerged in water in July, we rely on the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services to give us the heads up so we can have a head start on what to do.
But PAGASA is not just a foul-weather friend. Its mandate goes beyond issuing hourly bulletins during typhoons.
On ordinary days, it provides information, which, though boring, is basic for society to function and for the economy to run.
Tides help guide ships to ports, pla nes plot their flights on when the sun will rise or set. And both fishermen and feng shui-believing Taipans consult the lunar calendar for good fortune.
PAGASA tells us when and where it would rain, and by how much, so that the man behind the carabao in Mindoro will know when to plow the field and the man behind the wheel in Malabon will know when to plod through flooded streets.
All these data come from PAGASA.
And so do the time, the temperature, and weather icons on our cellphone screen.
But PAGASA is more than just the nation's timekeeper or thermometer.
It is becoming an increasingly needed app for a country which has to cope with an increasingly changing climate.
We don't need historical weather data to tell us that storms are getting frequent, fickle and ferocious.
Each of us has been a victim of at least one in the past nine years. So we don't just read about typhoons, we reel from them.
There was the triple whammy of Milenyo-Reming-Seniang in 2006.
Frank laid waste to Panay in 2008, but, thankfully, there was another Frank who helped it back on its feet.
Ondoy marinated large swaths of Manila the following year. And it was also in 2009 that Pepeng temporarily transformed that flatland from Bulacan to Pangasinan into the Central Lake of Luzon.
And like a sickle, Pablo in 2012 hacked its way in the most unexpected place and time, December, in Mindanao, catching many by surprise as it came outside the typhoon belt and calendar.
A couple of storms since then had barreled across Mindanao, blowing away its idyllic status of being typhoon-free.
And of course, there was Yolanda, the most powerful typhoon in recorded human history.
But even if you take Yolanda out of the tally, the resulting figure would still show that typhoons from 2004 to 2014 claimed the most lives and wrought the greatest damage to property than in any decade in our history.
From 2004 to 2014, this parade of cyclones left 14,150 dead, 46,691 injured and 4,169 missing.
It affected almost 100 million persons, damaged 4.5 million houses, and destroyed P338 billion worth of public and private property.
If you count the missing as dead, the typhoon death toll in the Philippines is higher than the civilian lives lost in Afghanistan during the same period.
But our experiences in 2012, 2013 and 2014 prove that you don't need a typhoon to trigger heavy rains.
Because they're not baptized in the meteorological tradition, we have given this massive annual flooding phenomenon in Mega Manila a generic name - Habagat.
The problem with Habagat is what it lacks in wind, it compensates with water, lots of it.
But having too much water is as harmful as having too little of it.
The other end of the climatic pendulum swing are droughts - and we have come to know that a dam without water is more frightening than one that is about to overflow.
This year alone, mere dry spells in 54 provinces have altered the rice production outlook and led us to scout for sources abroad, in case the dry spell graduates into drought.
That search for a safety net is not without basis nor precedents.
An El Nino episode in 1997 to 1998 parched 600,000 hectares of land and racked up P9 billion in farm losses.
The new normal in an era marked by weather extremes is that our crops are vulnerable to death by drought or by drowning.
But even without the spectre of climate change, our geographical location and topographical makeup expose us to natural disasters.
We are perched atop the Ring of Fire. We serve as the tollgate to a typhoon passageway, being the first landmass which greets typhoons born in the Pacific.
At least 20 typhoons hit us each year, some brushing the fringes of our archipelago, others hitting our cities bull's eye.
Sadly, a marriage of natural mishaps and, yes, man-made missteps, like our infatuation with erecting homes on waterways and our love affair with cutting trees, have made us the second most disaster-prone country in the world.
One study even tagged us as the country which absorbed the most number of disasters since the 1900.
And our being a doormat to typhoons which crams more people per square kilometre than China aggravates the threat of climate change.
Scientists have come up with dire predictions on the fate, if not reversed, that awaits us.
By 2100, annual mean temperature will rise by 4.8 degrees Celsius from the 1990 average, and sea level by 70 centimeters, which means senators who will sit in the 44th Congress of the Philippines, like Chiz Escudero V or Sonny Angara IV, if the Senate will still be here, will ride rubber boats, and on the hottest of days wear rubber boots to work.
On agriculture, the forecasts say, that sans mitigating measures, rice yield will plummet by 75 percent.
This is based on the calculus that every 1 degree Celsius increase in temperature decreases rice harvest by 10 percent. Goodbye, unli rice.
Though this is still far away, we have been given a preview of things to come.
This summer, mercury rose to "38 degrees but feels like hell" levels. And as I've mentioned before, in the past years, more and stronger storms dump more rain for longer periods.
Against this backdrop, a lot of climate change-adaptation and disaster risk-mitigation measures have been proposed and adopted.
The Philippines has passed a raft of laws which comply with global trends and best practices.
Even the budget now contains mandatory earmarks for climate change resiliency.
There is, however, one measure that needs to be passed, and it is this bill, because there can be no climate change adaptation without weather bureau modernization.
Cutting emissions might be a tall order, but by passing this bill, government can no longer be accused that when it comes to modernizing PAGASA it has so far been spewing hot air.
But climate change or not, a modern and efficient weather agency is public service for which there is no substitute.
This is because human activities depend on the weather: planting intentions, holiday plans, construction schedules, travel timetables.
When you march down the aisle, you look up to God for blessings and to the sky to see if rains will mar your wedding.
When you plan a family picnic, you want to be assured that the date chosen is not actually an appointment with a typhoon.
If human activities are weather-dependent, then we need a dependable weather service.
One which can spot a speck of low pressure area thousands of miles away, project if it would develop into a typhoon, and when it does, plot its track with precision, like where it will make landfall.
In short, an agency that will tell a storm, "I've got my eye on you."
One which can forecast local weather, especially in Metro Manila, where the economic cost of vehicular traffic is already P2.4 billion on an uneventful day and possibly twice that amount on bad weather nights.
One which can offer a full package of services that could predict and profile weather and climate events and prescribe measures that will protect life, property and livelihood from these.
One which will tell us of our weaknesses, like villages prone to landslides, storm surges, or those areas which can rapidly turn into a Waterworld.
At present, among PAGASA's mandate is to provide up-to-date, timely and reliable information on atmospheric, astronomical and other weather-related phenomena.
It is tasked to help the government and the people prepare and respond to typhoons, floods, landslides, storm surges, extreme climatic events, El Nino, and climate change.
It is also required to provide inputs on disaster-risk reduction, climate change adaption, and integrated-water resources management.
Another mandate is to ensure that the country's international commitments are met, because if typhoons respect no boundaries, so must meteorological work span borders.
There are seven components of PAGASA's modernization.
First is equipment modernization.
On this, PAGASA sent a shopping list costing a little less than P3.9 billion. Expensive? Not really, if compared to the P172 billion in combined damages to agriculture, property and infrastructure which four typhoons - Ondoy, Pepeng in 2009, Yolanda in 2013 and Glenda last year - caused.
Second is Research and Development (R&D) enhancement.
Third is the establishment of the PAGASA data center.
This is to centralize technical outputs in one data bank.
Fourth is expanding the reach of PAGASA.
PAGASA must go local. Localized weather forecasting is the way forward. The benefits of Doppler radars must be replicated. This requires expanding its network of weather data capturing stations.
Fifth is empowering it to disseminate its information further and faster.
Information not disseminated is information wasted. Much of PAGASA's data is perishable. Storm notices, for example, have a quick shelf life. Because timely information saves lives, PAGASA must go retail in communicating its findings. If flooding is imminent, PAGASA must send of a flood of tweets and texts.
Sixth is boosting its cooperation linkages and joint venture programs, both domestic and international.
For example, local non-government weather outfits, if tapped, are effective force extenders. Tapping this network and harvesting their data will cut both time and expenses. The same openness by which it forges bilateral and multilateral relations abroad must also animate its dealings toward local stakeholders.
Seventh is building up its human resources.
It has been reported that more and more PAGASA personnel leave the Philippine area of responsibility yearly.
This alsa-balutan has inspired the rewording of a popular ballad, which, thankfully, I should only recite and not sing, if we don't want to rain tonight:
Walang tigil ang ulan
At nasaan ka, araw
Wala na bang nananatili sa PAGASA
Nakapagtataka, saan sila napunta?
We must stop this exodus of talent while we train and develop more of them.
This bill instructs the creation of a pay scale for PAGASA employees, which has long been authorized by the Magna Carta for Science and Technology Personnel. This has been pending for 17 years now.
In addition, it calls for a personnel retention incentive, not exceeding 20 percent of the basic salary of qualified personnel.
It also creates a scholarship program for undergraduate and graduate degrees in Meteorology and related fields. More training programs will also be offered.
Ideally, adjusting the public sector pay should be bureaucracy-wide. Revenues have been on the rise since the present government salary rates were authorized in 2009.
When it comes to salaries, I have always believed that a rising tide must raise all ships. But I will settle for a situation where rising floodwaters will, in the meantime, raise just one boat.
In all, the total cost to modernize PAGASA is capital outlay of P3.9 billion, P45 million annually to fund the compensation adjustments and P70 million for training and scholarships.
To finance these, as well as future needs, your Senate bill taps both budgetary and "off-budget" sources.
Included in the latter is a proposed P3 billion from the net income of PAGCOR, to be taken from the 50 percent share of the national government, which, by the way, was P14 billion in 2014.
If we need to get it from gaming revenues, so be it. We need the money so we don't have to roll the dice--or read the cards-- in predicting if it will rain tomorrow.
Another revenue source we are eyeing is income from PAGASA's specialized products and services, as well as cost recovery programs.
There is actually a market for customized weather data. For example, it is common practice for aviation and maritime companies to pay for these.
While some services to private firms will come with a price, there shall be no fee charged on the issuance of regular and special forecasts and warnings that affect safety and such other material for the public good.
Other sources are grants, bequests, donations, ODA, budgetary surpluses, and income from the PAGASA Modernization Trust Fund.
The modernized PAGASA will be led by an Administrator with the rank of Undersecretary. He will be assisted by three deputies.
The Administrator will join the Secretaries of Science and Technology, Budget and Management, and NEDA in implementing the modernization program, the timetable and contents of which will be spelled out in the IRR which shall be issued 90 days after the enactment of this bill.
To ensure that this law will not end up as yet another unfunded mandate, the annual cost of modernization shall be included in the General Appropriations Act
Whatever the amount, I am confident that investments in PAGASA will dwarf the damages caused by typhoons in this climate change era when they're coming in from unexpected places, with unexpected strengths, and at unexpected times.
Mr. President, my dear colleagues:
As we chart PAGASA's future, let me take you back to its past.
PAGASA traces its beginnings to January 1865, when two Jesuits started recording daily weather data in the Observatorio Meteorologico of the Ateneo Municipal in Intramuros.
The observatory soon became a public institution through a Spanish royal decree.
So this year is PAGASA's 150th founding anniversary.
But we must approve this bill not because we want it to be our birthday gift to this agency. We must pass it because this is what our people, our country, and our future need.
As the dark clouds of climate change hover on the horizon, we can however look forward to the future with hope if PAGASA is given one.
Press Release : http://www.senate.gov.ph/press_release/2015/0610_recto1.asp
Everything is free just look for it
Whether we live in a place that sizzles in May or is submerged in water in July, we rely on the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services to give us the heads up so we can have a head start on what to do.
But PAGASA is not just a foul-weather friend. Its mandate goes beyond issuing hourly bulletins during typhoons.
On ordinary days, it provides information, which, though boring, is basic for society to function and for the economy to run.
Tides help guide ships to ports, pla nes plot their flights on when the sun will rise or set. And both fishermen and feng shui-believing Taipans consult the lunar calendar for good fortune.
PAGASA tells us when and where it would rain, and by how much, so that the man behind the carabao in Mindoro will know when to plow the field and the man behind the wheel in Malabon will know when to plod through flooded streets.
All these data come from PAGASA.
And so do the time, the temperature, and weather icons on our cellphone screen.
But PAGASA is more than just the nation's timekeeper or thermometer.
It is becoming an increasingly needed app for a country which has to cope with an increasingly changing climate.
We don't need historical weather data to tell us that storms are getting frequent, fickle and ferocious.
Each of us has been a victim of at least one in the past nine years. So we don't just read about typhoons, we reel from them.
There was the triple whammy of Milenyo-Reming-Seniang in 2006.
Frank laid waste to Panay in 2008, but, thankfully, there was another Frank who helped it back on its feet.
Ondoy marinated large swaths of Manila the following year. And it was also in 2009 that Pepeng temporarily transformed that flatland from Bulacan to Pangasinan into the Central Lake of Luzon.
And like a sickle, Pablo in 2012 hacked its way in the most unexpected place and time, December, in Mindanao, catching many by surprise as it came outside the typhoon belt and calendar.
A couple of storms since then had barreled across Mindanao, blowing away its idyllic status of being typhoon-free.
And of course, there was Yolanda, the most powerful typhoon in recorded human history.
But even if you take Yolanda out of the tally, the resulting figure would still show that typhoons from 2004 to 2014 claimed the most lives and wrought the greatest damage to property than in any decade in our history.
From 2004 to 2014, this parade of cyclones left 14,150 dead, 46,691 injured and 4,169 missing.
It affected almost 100 million persons, damaged 4.5 million houses, and destroyed P338 billion worth of public and private property.
If you count the missing as dead, the typhoon death toll in the Philippines is higher than the civilian lives lost in Afghanistan during the same period.
But our experiences in 2012, 2013 and 2014 prove that you don't need a typhoon to trigger heavy rains.
Because they're not baptized in the meteorological tradition, we have given this massive annual flooding phenomenon in Mega Manila a generic name - Habagat.
The problem with Habagat is what it lacks in wind, it compensates with water, lots of it.
But having too much water is as harmful as having too little of it.
The other end of the climatic pendulum swing are droughts - and we have come to know that a dam without water is more frightening than one that is about to overflow.
This year alone, mere dry spells in 54 provinces have altered the rice production outlook and led us to scout for sources abroad, in case the dry spell graduates into drought.
That search for a safety net is not without basis nor precedents.
An El Nino episode in 1997 to 1998 parched 600,000 hectares of land and racked up P9 billion in farm losses.
The new normal in an era marked by weather extremes is that our crops are vulnerable to death by drought or by drowning.
But even without the spectre of climate change, our geographical location and topographical makeup expose us to natural disasters.
We are perched atop the Ring of Fire. We serve as the tollgate to a typhoon passageway, being the first landmass which greets typhoons born in the Pacific.
At least 20 typhoons hit us each year, some brushing the fringes of our archipelago, others hitting our cities bull's eye.
Sadly, a marriage of natural mishaps and, yes, man-made missteps, like our infatuation with erecting homes on waterways and our love affair with cutting trees, have made us the second most disaster-prone country in the world.
One study even tagged us as the country which absorbed the most number of disasters since the 1900.
And our being a doormat to typhoons which crams more people per square kilometre than China aggravates the threat of climate change.
Scientists have come up with dire predictions on the fate, if not reversed, that awaits us.
By 2100, annual mean temperature will rise by 4.8 degrees Celsius from the 1990 average, and sea level by 70 centimeters, which means senators who will sit in the 44th Congress of the Philippines, like Chiz Escudero V or Sonny Angara IV, if the Senate will still be here, will ride rubber boats, and on the hottest of days wear rubber boots to work.
On agriculture, the forecasts say, that sans mitigating measures, rice yield will plummet by 75 percent.
This is based on the calculus that every 1 degree Celsius increase in temperature decreases rice harvest by 10 percent. Goodbye, unli rice.
Though this is still far away, we have been given a preview of things to come.
This summer, mercury rose to "38 degrees but feels like hell" levels. And as I've mentioned before, in the past years, more and stronger storms dump more rain for longer periods.
Against this backdrop, a lot of climate change-adaptation and disaster risk-mitigation measures have been proposed and adopted.
The Philippines has passed a raft of laws which comply with global trends and best practices.
Even the budget now contains mandatory earmarks for climate change resiliency.
There is, however, one measure that needs to be passed, and it is this bill, because there can be no climate change adaptation without weather bureau modernization.
Cutting emissions might be a tall order, but by passing this bill, government can no longer be accused that when it comes to modernizing PAGASA it has so far been spewing hot air.
But climate change or not, a modern and efficient weather agency is public service for which there is no substitute.
This is because human activities depend on the weather: planting intentions, holiday plans, construction schedules, travel timetables.
When you march down the aisle, you look up to God for blessings and to the sky to see if rains will mar your wedding.
When you plan a family picnic, you want to be assured that the date chosen is not actually an appointment with a typhoon.
If human activities are weather-dependent, then we need a dependable weather service.
One which can spot a speck of low pressure area thousands of miles away, project if it would develop into a typhoon, and when it does, plot its track with precision, like where it will make landfall.
In short, an agency that will tell a storm, "I've got my eye on you."
One which can forecast local weather, especially in Metro Manila, where the economic cost of vehicular traffic is already P2.4 billion on an uneventful day and possibly twice that amount on bad weather nights.
One which can offer a full package of services that could predict and profile weather and climate events and prescribe measures that will protect life, property and livelihood from these.
One which will tell us of our weaknesses, like villages prone to landslides, storm surges, or those areas which can rapidly turn into a Waterworld.
At present, among PAGASA's mandate is to provide up-to-date, timely and reliable information on atmospheric, astronomical and other weather-related phenomena.
It is tasked to help the government and the people prepare and respond to typhoons, floods, landslides, storm surges, extreme climatic events, El Nino, and climate change.
It is also required to provide inputs on disaster-risk reduction, climate change adaption, and integrated-water resources management.
Another mandate is to ensure that the country's international commitments are met, because if typhoons respect no boundaries, so must meteorological work span borders.
There are seven components of PAGASA's modernization.
First is equipment modernization.
On this, PAGASA sent a shopping list costing a little less than P3.9 billion. Expensive? Not really, if compared to the P172 billion in combined damages to agriculture, property and infrastructure which four typhoons - Ondoy, Pepeng in 2009, Yolanda in 2013 and Glenda last year - caused.
Second is Research and Development (R&D) enhancement.
Third is the establishment of the PAGASA data center.
This is to centralize technical outputs in one data bank.
Fourth is expanding the reach of PAGASA.
PAGASA must go local. Localized weather forecasting is the way forward. The benefits of Doppler radars must be replicated. This requires expanding its network of weather data capturing stations.
Fifth is empowering it to disseminate its information further and faster.
Information not disseminated is information wasted. Much of PAGASA's data is perishable. Storm notices, for example, have a quick shelf life. Because timely information saves lives, PAGASA must go retail in communicating its findings. If flooding is imminent, PAGASA must send of a flood of tweets and texts.
Sixth is boosting its cooperation linkages and joint venture programs, both domestic and international.
For example, local non-government weather outfits, if tapped, are effective force extenders. Tapping this network and harvesting their data will cut both time and expenses. The same openness by which it forges bilateral and multilateral relations abroad must also animate its dealings toward local stakeholders.
Seventh is building up its human resources.
It has been reported that more and more PAGASA personnel leave the Philippine area of responsibility yearly.
This alsa-balutan has inspired the rewording of a popular ballad, which, thankfully, I should only recite and not sing, if we don't want to rain tonight:
Walang tigil ang ulan
At nasaan ka, araw
Wala na bang nananatili sa PAGASA
Nakapagtataka, saan sila napunta?
We must stop this exodus of talent while we train and develop more of them.
This bill instructs the creation of a pay scale for PAGASA employees, which has long been authorized by the Magna Carta for Science and Technology Personnel. This has been pending for 17 years now.
In addition, it calls for a personnel retention incentive, not exceeding 20 percent of the basic salary of qualified personnel.
It also creates a scholarship program for undergraduate and graduate degrees in Meteorology and related fields. More training programs will also be offered.
Ideally, adjusting the public sector pay should be bureaucracy-wide. Revenues have been on the rise since the present government salary rates were authorized in 2009.
When it comes to salaries, I have always believed that a rising tide must raise all ships. But I will settle for a situation where rising floodwaters will, in the meantime, raise just one boat.
In all, the total cost to modernize PAGASA is capital outlay of P3.9 billion, P45 million annually to fund the compensation adjustments and P70 million for training and scholarships.
To finance these, as well as future needs, your Senate bill taps both budgetary and "off-budget" sources.
Included in the latter is a proposed P3 billion from the net income of PAGCOR, to be taken from the 50 percent share of the national government, which, by the way, was P14 billion in 2014.
If we need to get it from gaming revenues, so be it. We need the money so we don't have to roll the dice--or read the cards-- in predicting if it will rain tomorrow.
Another revenue source we are eyeing is income from PAGASA's specialized products and services, as well as cost recovery programs.
There is actually a market for customized weather data. For example, it is common practice for aviation and maritime companies to pay for these.
While some services to private firms will come with a price, there shall be no fee charged on the issuance of regular and special forecasts and warnings that affect safety and such other material for the public good.
Other sources are grants, bequests, donations, ODA, budgetary surpluses, and income from the PAGASA Modernization Trust Fund.
The modernized PAGASA will be led by an Administrator with the rank of Undersecretary. He will be assisted by three deputies.
The Administrator will join the Secretaries of Science and Technology, Budget and Management, and NEDA in implementing the modernization program, the timetable and contents of which will be spelled out in the IRR which shall be issued 90 days after the enactment of this bill.
To ensure that this law will not end up as yet another unfunded mandate, the annual cost of modernization shall be included in the General Appropriations Act
Whatever the amount, I am confident that investments in PAGASA will dwarf the damages caused by typhoons in this climate change era when they're coming in from unexpected places, with unexpected strengths, and at unexpected times.
Mr. President, my dear colleagues:
As we chart PAGASA's future, let me take you back to its past.
PAGASA traces its beginnings to January 1865, when two Jesuits started recording daily weather data in the Observatorio Meteorologico of the Ateneo Municipal in Intramuros.
The observatory soon became a public institution through a Spanish royal decree.
So this year is PAGASA's 150th founding anniversary.
But we must approve this bill not because we want it to be our birthday gift to this agency. We must pass it because this is what our people, our country, and our future need.
As the dark clouds of climate change hover on the horizon, we can however look forward to the future with hope if PAGASA is given one.
Press Release : http://www.senate.gov.ph/press_release/2015/0610_recto1.asp
Everything is free just look for it
Thursday, April 2, 2015
Update for Typhoon #ChedengPH
UPDATE ON TYPHOON MAYSAK (#ChedengPH)
April 2, 2015

As of 04:00PM, April 2, 2015, Typhoon CHEDENG (Maysak) slowed down as it moved from 19 kph West-Northwest to 15 kph Northwest but maintained its strength of 175 kph maximum sustained winds and gustiness of up to 210 kph. It was estimated based on all available data at 970 km East Southeast of Virac, Catanduanes (13.0˚N, 133.2˚E).
Due to this development, PAGASA will be raising Public Storm Warning Signal (PSWS) #1 later this evening instead of this afternoon over Bicol provinces. Once PSWS #1 is hoisted, sea travel over these areas will be suspended.
TY CHEDENG is expected to weaken further as it moves slowly towards the eastern seaboard of Luzon.
It is estimated to make landfall over the eastern coast of Aurora - Isabela area by Sunday late morning (April 5) and exit PAR over Ilocos Sur area by Monday afternoon (April 6).
Moderate to Heavy rainfall is expected within 150-200 km radius of the typhoon.
Storm surges and sea surface waves of less than 3 meters are possible over the eastern coasts of Quezon, Aurora and Isabela.
It is advised to refrain from outdoor activities particularly along beaches of eastern Luzon starting Saturday.
What to expect during Holy Week (April 2– 5, 2015)
Thursday – Friday (April 2-3):
• Eastern Luzon will experience good weather today and tomorrow.
• Basically fair weather (warm and humid) with the possibility of isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms is expected over the central and western sections of the country until Friday.
Saturday & Sunday (April 4 - 5):
• Rains and gusty winds will be experienced over eastern coast of Luzon and stormy weather is expected over Central-Northern Luzon by Sunday.
• Greater Metro Manila Area will have occasional rains and gusty winds while the rest of the country will have warm and humid condition.
• Rough to very rough sea conditions will prevail over the eastern seaboard of Luzon, hence dangerous to all sea vessels.
This outlook will be updated when significant changes in the weather pattern occurs.
Everything is free just look for it
Thursday, March 19, 2015
PAGASA 150th year and Climate Knowledge for Climate Action #WorldMetDay
DOST-PAGASA 150th Year Anniversary and World/National Meteorological Day Celebration
Theme: Climate Knowledge for Climate Action
Program of Activities
23 March 2015, 6:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Aerobics or Zumba and Fun Games, Flag Ceremony and Thanksgiving Mass
Multi-purpose Hall
Motorcade
Central Office to Quezon City Elliptical Road
Cutting of Ribbons/Opening of Exhibit (PAGASA Then and Now)
Main Office Lobby
Press Launch of PAGASA’s New Products and Services
Amihan Conference Room
Scientific Forum
WMO Regional Training Room
Employees Loyalty Award
Multi-purpose Hall
Conferment of 2015 Wind Vane Award
Main Office Lobby
The World Meteorological Organization, as the successor of the International Meteorological Organization, created in 1873, has its fundamental mission to support the countries of the world in providing meteorological and hydrological services to protect life and property from natural disasters related to weather, climate and water, to safeguard the environment, and to contribute to sustainable development. This cannot happen without the necessary observations, research and operations that develop the understanding and knowledge of weather and climate.
Since 1961, World Meteorological Day has commemorated the coming into force on 23 March 1950 of the Convention establishing the World Meteorological Organization and the essential contribution that National Meteorological and Hydrological Services make to the safety and well-being of society. Each year, the celebrations focus on a theme of topical interest.
The theme for this year, “Climate knowledge for climate action,” provides an opportunity to take stock of the climate knowledge built in the last decades as an essential base to support the path towards more ambitious action to address climate change and climate variability.
Source :http://www.wmo.int/worldmetday/content/about
Everything is free just look for it
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
National Astronomy Week
NATIONAL ASTRONOMY WEEK (NAW)
16-20 February 2015
THEME: "Reaching Our People: Transferring Knowledge in Astronomy"
FREE! Astronomy lectures using mobile planetarium, film showing, stargazing and telescoping sessions at different schools in Laoag City, Ilocos Norte (17-18 February 2015), stargazing and telescoping sessions at PAGASA Astronomical Observatory, U.P., Diliman, Quezon City and planetarium shows at PAGASA Planetarium, Science Garden Complex, Agham Road, Diliman, Quezon City.
A STAR PARTY contest will be conducted for nine (9) Public High Schools (first-come, first-serve basis) on 18 February 2015 at 3:00pm until dawn at the Laoag City, Ilocos Norte.
Interested parties who would like to visit PAGASA astronomical facilities during the celebration may call at:
TEL: 434-2715, 929-1237 and 927-5509 (for reservation purposes)
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Saturday, January 17, 2015
Weekly Outlook Papal Visit #AmangPH
(January 17), "Amang" is expected to make landfall over Northern Samar. SORSOGON and the Samar Provinces will experience stormy weather. Leyte, Biliran and the rest of Bicol Region will have rains and occasional gusty winds. CARAGA, the provinces of Marinduque and Romblon and the rest of Visayas will have cloudy skies with light to moderate rainshowers while the rest of Mindanao will be partly cloudy to cloudy with isolated light to moderate rains. Thunderstorms are also likely to occur over these areas. Metro Manila and the rest Luzon will have partly cloudy to cloudy skies with passing light rains.
By Sunday (January 18), Bicol Region will experience rains and gusty winds as "Amang" is expected to move closer towards the said area. Metro Manila, CALABARZON, and the provinces of Mindoro, Marinduqe, Romblon and Northern Samar will be cloudy with light to moderate rains while Mindanao, Palawan and the rest of Visayas will have partly cloudy to cloudy skies with isolated light rains. Thunderstorms are also likely to occur over these areas. The regions of Cagayan and Cordillera will be cloudy with light rains while the rest of Luzon will have generally good weather with passing light rains.
By Monday (January 19), "Amang" is expected to weaken into a Low Pressure Area (LPA) as it moves closer toward the eastern section of Northern Luzon. Cagayan Valley and the provinces of Aurora, Rizal, Quezon and Camarines Norte will experience cloudy skies with light to moderate rains. Metro Manila and the rest of Luzon will have partly cloudy to cloudy skies with light rains while the rest of the country will be partly cloudy to cloudy with isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms.
Throughout the rest of the forecast period (January 20 - 23), the whole country will have generally fair weather condition with chances of isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms over the eastern section of Visayas and Mindanao. Passing light rains over luzon is to be expected by Thursday and Friday.
Rough to very rough sea conditions will continue to persist over the seaboards of Luzon and Visayas and over the eastern seaboard of Mindanao throughout the outlook period due to the "Amihan" and Tropical Cyclone "Amang".
This outlook will be updated as soon as significant changes in the weather pattern occurs.
Source:
http://pagasa.dost.gov.ph/index.php/weather/weekly-outlook
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By Sunday (January 18), Bicol Region will experience rains and gusty winds as "Amang" is expected to move closer towards the said area. Metro Manila, CALABARZON, and the provinces of Mindoro, Marinduqe, Romblon and Northern Samar will be cloudy with light to moderate rains while Mindanao, Palawan and the rest of Visayas will have partly cloudy to cloudy skies with isolated light rains. Thunderstorms are also likely to occur over these areas. The regions of Cagayan and Cordillera will be cloudy with light rains while the rest of Luzon will have generally good weather with passing light rains.
By Monday (January 19), "Amang" is expected to weaken into a Low Pressure Area (LPA) as it moves closer toward the eastern section of Northern Luzon. Cagayan Valley and the provinces of Aurora, Rizal, Quezon and Camarines Norte will experience cloudy skies with light to moderate rains. Metro Manila and the rest of Luzon will have partly cloudy to cloudy skies with light rains while the rest of the country will be partly cloudy to cloudy with isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms.
Throughout the rest of the forecast period (January 20 - 23), the whole country will have generally fair weather condition with chances of isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms over the eastern section of Visayas and Mindanao. Passing light rains over luzon is to be expected by Thursday and Friday.
Rough to very rough sea conditions will continue to persist over the seaboards of Luzon and Visayas and over the eastern seaboard of Mindanao throughout the outlook period due to the "Amihan" and Tropical Cyclone "Amang".
This outlook will be updated as soon as significant changes in the weather pattern occurs.
Source:
http://pagasa.dost.gov.ph/index.php/weather/weekly-outlook
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Thursday, November 27, 2014
PAGASA's warning via Google Public Alerts
After its launch on November 12, 2014, Google Public Alerts released today the first storm warning signal issued by the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) due to the occurrence of Tropical Depression “Queenie”.
Google Public Alerts is a platform for disseminating emergency messages and everyday alerts using Google’s strength in information and technology aiming to provide the public with information it needs to make informed decisions during critical events such as severe weather disturbances.
Google Public Alerts work by incorporating public alert data from authoritative sources into Google Search, Google Maps, and other Google platforms and simplifying the process of finding emergency information. Contents come from partner countries such as USA, Australia and Canada. Google is able to provide Public Alerts in the Philippines through the information provided by PAGASA.
The PAGASA Technical Team worked on the project for six months and it is the fastest collaboration of Google amongst the nine (9) partner countries.
“We expect that with the next typhoon that would come in the country, the PAGASA Crisis Team in partnership with Google Crisis Response Team , will be issuing the first Public Alert in the Philippines”, said Dr. Landrico Dalida, Jr., PAGASA’s OIC for Operations and Services, during the launch.
True enough, Tropical Depression Queenie is the first featured weather disturbance in Google Public Alerts in the Philippines.
The general public can view detailed information about the storm such as the location, strength, movement and impact, as well as recommended actions and precautionary measures.
By providing readily-available online data, Google Public Alerts actually complements the existing information released by PAGASA thru its website and other social media accounts.
For live view click here : http://www.google.org/publicalerts/
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Google Public Alerts is a platform for disseminating emergency messages and everyday alerts using Google’s strength in information and technology aiming to provide the public with information it needs to make informed decisions during critical events such as severe weather disturbances.
Google Public Alerts work by incorporating public alert data from authoritative sources into Google Search, Google Maps, and other Google platforms and simplifying the process of finding emergency information. Contents come from partner countries such as USA, Australia and Canada. Google is able to provide Public Alerts in the Philippines through the information provided by PAGASA.
The PAGASA Technical Team worked on the project for six months and it is the fastest collaboration of Google amongst the nine (9) partner countries.
“We expect that with the next typhoon that would come in the country, the PAGASA Crisis Team in partnership with Google Crisis Response Team , will be issuing the first Public Alert in the Philippines”, said Dr. Landrico Dalida, Jr., PAGASA’s OIC for Operations and Services, during the launch.
True enough, Tropical Depression Queenie is the first featured weather disturbance in Google Public Alerts in the Philippines.
The general public can view detailed information about the storm such as the location, strength, movement and impact, as well as recommended actions and precautionary measures.
By providing readily-available online data, Google Public Alerts actually complements the existing information released by PAGASA thru its website and other social media accounts.
For live view click here : http://www.google.org/publicalerts/
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Wednesday, October 22, 2014
The 2014 Southeast Asia Astronomy Network Conference (SEAAN 2014)
The 2014 Southeast Asia Astronomy Network
Conference (SEAAN 2014)
Rizal Technological University, Philippines 16-17 December 2014

Announcement
The SEAAN 2014 will be held at Rizal Technological University, Mandaluyong City, Philippines on 16-17 December 2014. The event will be sponsored by the Department of Science and Technology (DOST)- Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) and the Rizal Technological University (RTU).
In addition to the National Focal Points and officials of SEAAN, the Conference proposes to accommodate 20 participants from the SEAAN member countries. Interested applicants should register online and are advised to observe the important dates.
General Information
The Conference aims to promote cooperation in the field of education, research and popularization of astronomy among Southeast Asian member countries. It will be divided into business and scientific sessions. The business session will be the 6th SEAAN Meeting and will be held on 16 December 2014. The scientific session will be held on 17 December and will include plenary and invited talks and oral and poster presentations.
Important Dates
10 November 2014, deadline for registration and abstract submission
22 November 2014, deadline for hotel reservation
Registration, Hotel Reservation & Abstract Submission
Please download registration form and submit abstract together with the completed form to Engr. Dario L. Dela Cruz, Chief, Space Science and Astronomy Section (SASS), PAGASA through his email address: dariodlc2004@yahoo.com.
Venue and Hotel Accommodation
The Conference will be held at Rizal Technological Univeristy, Boni Ave., Mandaluyong City, Philippines. Rizal Technological University’s
website: www.rtu.edu.ph/
Hotel accommodation will be at New Horizon Hotel –Manila, 778 Boni Ave., Mandaluyong City.
New Horizon Hotel – Manila’s website: www.newhorizonhotel-manila.com/
Please download the hotel reservation form and submit it to Ms. Ruby-Ann dela Cruz, Head, Department of Earth and Space Sciences, RTU through her email address: bee1delacruz@yahoo.com
LOCAL TRANSFERS BETWEEN AIRPORT AND HOTEL
Arrival at Ninoy Aquino International Airport
Special arrangements will be made for transporting participants from the airport to the hotel and back. Local organizers will meet all participants and SEAAN focal points at the airport. All are requested to go to the VIP lounge after arrival and getting their luggage. They are also requested to provide their flight details, which include the arrival and departure times and flight numbers to the coordinator, Engr. Dela Cruz, at least a week before arrival date.
Your Stay in Manila
Money Matters
The Philippine currency is the Philippine peso (Php). There are many money-changing facilities near the venue and the accommodation and even at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) where you can change foreign currency for Philippine peso. The exchange rate is approximately P44.87 to a US$ as of 17 October 2014.
The Weather
The meeting period, 16-17 December 2014 falls during the Northeast Monsoon Season characterized by moderate temperature and little or no rainfall.
Voltage
The voltage in the Philippines is 220V using the 2P AC Male flat plug type and multi-standard sockets.
Food
The main food in the Philippines includes rice, beans, beef, chicken, vegetables, fish and other sea foods. There are a lot of delicious fruit such as sweet bananas, mangoes, pineapples, guavas and oranges, to mention a few.
Registration Fee
The organizers will not collect registration fee.
Forms:
Grant Application Form
Hotel Reservation Form
Registration Form
Source : http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/events-archive/1475-seean-2014
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Monday, October 6, 2014
Weather Outlook October 6, 2014 #OmpongPH
Weather Outlook
Issued at: 5:00 p.m. 06 October 2014
Valid until: 5:00 p.m. 12 October 2014
Today (October 06), Palawan, Visayas and Mindanao will have cloudy skies with light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms due Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). Ilocos Norte and Cagayan will have cloudy skies with light to moderate rains. Metro Manila and the rest of the country will be partly cloudy to cloudy with isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms.
By Tuesday (October 7), the ITCZ will continue to bring cloudy skies with light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms over Bicol Region, Palawan, Visayas and Mindanao. Metro Manila and the rest of the country will continue to experience partly cloudy to cloudy skies with chances of isolated thunderstorms.
From (October 8-9), Wednesday to Thursday, there will be light to moderate rains over the eastern section of Luzon, Palawan and Visayas due to the trough of the Typhoon "VONGFONG" which is expected to enter the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) by Wednesday (October 8). The rest of the country will have partly cloudy to cloudy skies apart from localized rainshowers or thunderstorms.

By Friday and Saturday (October 10-11), the tropical cyclone is expected to exit the par and move toward the southern islands of Japan. It is not expected to make landfall to any part of the country. However, a Low Pressure Area (LPA) will be develop west of Palawan. The said low pressure area lpa will traverse Palawan, Visayas and Bicol Region in a northeast direction bringing light to moderate rainshowers or thunderstorms over Bicol Region, Palawan, Visayas, MIMAROPA and CALABARZON.
By Sunday (October 12), Low Pressure Area (LPA) will make an exit over Camarines Provinces and will continue to move in northeast direction bringing light to moderate rainshowers or thunderstorms over the eastern section of Luzon, MIMAROPA and CALABARZON.
This weather outlook will be updated as soon as significant changes in the weather pattern occurs.
http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/weather/weekly-outlook
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Issued at: 5:00 p.m. 06 October 2014
Valid until: 5:00 p.m. 12 October 2014
Today (October 06), Palawan, Visayas and Mindanao will have cloudy skies with light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms due Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). Ilocos Norte and Cagayan will have cloudy skies with light to moderate rains. Metro Manila and the rest of the country will be partly cloudy to cloudy with isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms.
By Tuesday (October 7), the ITCZ will continue to bring cloudy skies with light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms over Bicol Region, Palawan, Visayas and Mindanao. Metro Manila and the rest of the country will continue to experience partly cloudy to cloudy skies with chances of isolated thunderstorms.
From (October 8-9), Wednesday to Thursday, there will be light to moderate rains over the eastern section of Luzon, Palawan and Visayas due to the trough of the Typhoon "VONGFONG" which is expected to enter the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) by Wednesday (October 8). The rest of the country will have partly cloudy to cloudy skies apart from localized rainshowers or thunderstorms.
By Friday and Saturday (October 10-11), the tropical cyclone is expected to exit the par and move toward the southern islands of Japan. It is not expected to make landfall to any part of the country. However, a Low Pressure Area (LPA) will be develop west of Palawan. The said low pressure area lpa will traverse Palawan, Visayas and Bicol Region in a northeast direction bringing light to moderate rainshowers or thunderstorms over Bicol Region, Palawan, Visayas, MIMAROPA and CALABARZON.
By Sunday (October 12), Low Pressure Area (LPA) will make an exit over Camarines Provinces and will continue to move in northeast direction bringing light to moderate rainshowers or thunderstorms over the eastern section of Luzon, MIMAROPA and CALABARZON.
This weather outlook will be updated as soon as significant changes in the weather pattern occurs.
http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/weather/weekly-outlook
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Sunday, August 3, 2014
Typhoon Jose Update
Estimated rainfall amount is from 10 – 25 mm per hour (heavy - intense) within the 650 km diameter of the Typhoon.
Typhoon "JOSE" will not yet affect any part of the country. However, the Southwest Monsoon will continue to bring occasional rains over Ilocos Region and Central Luzon while Metro Manila, CALABARZON and MIMAROPA will have occasional rains
Fisherfolks and those with small seacrafts are advised not to venture out over the Northern and Western seaboards of Luzon and the Eastern seaboard of Southern Luzon.
The public and the disaster risk reduction and management council concerned are advised to take appropriate actions and watch for the next bulletin to be issued at 11 AM tomorrow.

Satellite Image of Typhoon #JosePH via MetHydro Decision Support Infosys http://meteopilipinas.gov.ph/map.php
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Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Onset of the Rainy Season
The
prevailing synoptic conditions over the country are now characterized by
southwesterly windflow, high humidity, and occurrence of daily rainshowers and
thunderstorms. This development signifies the onset of the rainy season over
the western section of the country.

Meanwhile,
the unusual warming of sea surface temperature (SST) over the tropical Pacific
indicates the development of El Niño within the next three (3) months
(June-July-August). Starting September, rainfall patterns in some parts of the
country will be affected.
PAGASA
will continue to monitor the tropical Pacific and updates will be issued as
appropriate. Concerned agencies are advised to take precautionary measures. For
more information, please contact Weather Division (927-1541 / 927-1335) and
Climatology and Agromet Division (434-0955 / 435-1675)..
Press Release :
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Thursday, May 1, 2014
El Niño Watch 2014
Press Statement:
Quezon City, 01 MAy 2014
El Niño Watch:
PAGASA has been closely monitoring the oceanic and atmospheric conditions in the tropical Pacific that could lead to possible development of an El Niño. A majority of climate models indicate that El Niño may develop this year. El Niño is characterized by unusually warm ocean surface temperatures in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific (CEEP).
The sea surface temperature anomaly (SSTA) over the tropical Pacific remained to be El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO)- neutral during the past several months. The established treshold of SSTA for an El Niño phenomenon is 0.5°C or higher during a three-month period.
PAGASA has already noted significant increase in the SSTA from 0.2 to 0.4 C from April 21 to April 28, 2014. Because of this development and as climate models predict that this condition may persist for the next nine months, PAGASA is foreseeing the onset of El Niño in June which may peak during the last quarter of 2014 and may last up to the first quarter of 2015.
El Niño could affect the normal rainfall pattern in the country generally resulting in reduced rainfall. Different parts of the country may experience varying rainfall imapacts. PAGASA will be furnishing monthly rainfall outlook for six months for the different parts of the country.
The country could still experience normal number of tropical cyclone this year. However, El niño causes the behavior of tropical cyclones to become erratic, affecting its tracks and intensity. The tropical cyclone tracks are expected to shift northward and its intensity could become stronger.
PAGASA will continue to closely monitor the tropical Pacific and updates/advisories shall be issued as appropriate. Concerned agencies are advised to take precautionary measures to mitigate the potential impacts of this phenomenon.
MARIO G. MONTEJO
Secretary, DOST
source: http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/news-archive/897-el-nino-watch
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Quezon City, 01 MAy 2014
El Niño Watch:
PAGASA has been closely monitoring the oceanic and atmospheric conditions in the tropical Pacific that could lead to possible development of an El Niño. A majority of climate models indicate that El Niño may develop this year. El Niño is characterized by unusually warm ocean surface temperatures in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific (CEEP).
The sea surface temperature anomaly (SSTA) over the tropical Pacific remained to be El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO)- neutral during the past several months. The established treshold of SSTA for an El Niño phenomenon is 0.5°C or higher during a three-month period.
PAGASA has already noted significant increase in the SSTA from 0.2 to 0.4 C from April 21 to April 28, 2014. Because of this development and as climate models predict that this condition may persist for the next nine months, PAGASA is foreseeing the onset of El Niño in June which may peak during the last quarter of 2014 and may last up to the first quarter of 2015.
El Niño could affect the normal rainfall pattern in the country generally resulting in reduced rainfall. Different parts of the country may experience varying rainfall imapacts. PAGASA will be furnishing monthly rainfall outlook for six months for the different parts of the country.
The country could still experience normal number of tropical cyclone this year. However, El niño causes the behavior of tropical cyclones to become erratic, affecting its tracks and intensity. The tropical cyclone tracks are expected to shift northward and its intensity could become stronger.
PAGASA will continue to closely monitor the tropical Pacific and updates/advisories shall be issued as appropriate. Concerned agencies are advised to take precautionary measures to mitigate the potential impacts of this phenomenon.
MARIO G. MONTEJO
Secretary, DOST
source: http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/news-archive/897-el-nino-watch
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Thursday, February 6, 2014
Workshop for Disseminating Results of Mini-Project on Hazard and Exposure Mapping on Volcano and Flood
PHIVOLCS, JAXA, GIC-AIT organize workshop on volcano and flood hazard and exposure mapping
The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS) partnered with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and the Geo-Informatics Center – Asian Institute of Technology (GIC- AIT) in organizing the “Workshop for Disseminating Results of Mini-Project on Hazard and Exposure Mapping on Volcano and Flood” held on Feb. 6, 2014 at the PHIVOLCS Auditorium, Quezon City.
To present the project’s initial output during the third phase, how the data can be used during disaster, and to discuss future activities was the objectives of the workshop.
The workshop, which is related to the JAXA Mini Project 3rd Phase “Developing In-Country Database for Preparing High-Value Added Products for Sentinel Asia,” featured the case studies on Taal Volcano and on Olongapo City for the flood part.
Kaku Kazuya of JAXA said in his opening message: “Disaster preparedness is very important, and we started this project to prepare and share various maps and data in the framework of Mini-Project. When disaster happens, our results will be utilized together with satellite observation data. Above all, the most valuable results of this project will be this community of all participants of this project which will work together for disaster response.“
The workshop included different presentations: Mini-Project Results 1 Hazard and Exposure Mapping in Taal, Batangas) and Presentation of Mini-Project Results 2 Flood Hazard and Exposure Mapping
in Olongapo City, Zambales), Presentation on: How to utilize the collected data and experienced gained from the JAXA Mini project 2013/2014 for emergency response.
This was followed by a group discussion on the Post Mini-Project Activities and Sustainability focusing on different topics: Collaborations in data collection, Data sharing, Preparation of value-added products at the time of a disaster, Emergency response activities using the value-added products, and Verification of value-added products.
Also, Chathura H. Wickramasinghe SYAMS NASHRRULLAH presented the “Data Sharing for Better Disaster Mitigation.”
The same project sponsored a three-day training on “Development of GIS-based Elements-at-Risk Database Using High Resolution Remote Sensing Data” last Oct. 2013.
Staff from Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB), National Mapping and Resource Information Authoritiy (NAMRIA), National Institute of Geological Sciences (NIGS)- Project NOAH, Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG), Manila Observatory, National Power Corporation (NAPOCOR), PAGASA, and Office of Civil Defense (OCD) also participated in the workshop.
Source: PhiVolcs Facebook Page
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The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS) partnered with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and the Geo-Informatics Center – Asian Institute of Technology (GIC- AIT) in organizing the “Workshop for Disseminating Results of Mini-Project on Hazard and Exposure Mapping on Volcano and Flood” held on Feb. 6, 2014 at the PHIVOLCS Auditorium, Quezon City.
To present the project’s initial output during the third phase, how the data can be used during disaster, and to discuss future activities was the objectives of the workshop.

Kaku Kazuya of JAXA said in his opening message: “Disaster preparedness is very important, and we started this project to prepare and share various maps and data in the framework of Mini-Project. When disaster happens, our results will be utilized together with satellite observation data. Above all, the most valuable results of this project will be this community of all participants of this project which will work together for disaster response.“
The workshop included different presentations: Mini-Project Results 1 Hazard and Exposure Mapping in Taal, Batangas) and Presentation of Mini-Project Results 2 Flood Hazard and Exposure Mapping
in Olongapo City, Zambales), Presentation on: How to utilize the collected data and experienced gained from the JAXA Mini project 2013/2014 for emergency response.
This was followed by a group discussion on the Post Mini-Project Activities and Sustainability focusing on different topics: Collaborations in data collection, Data sharing, Preparation of value-added products at the time of a disaster, Emergency response activities using the value-added products, and Verification of value-added products.
Also, Chathura H. Wickramasinghe SYAMS NASHRRULLAH presented the “Data Sharing for Better Disaster Mitigation.”
The same project sponsored a three-day training on “Development of GIS-based Elements-at-Risk Database Using High Resolution Remote Sensing Data” last Oct. 2013.
Staff from Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB), National Mapping and Resource Information Authoritiy (NAMRIA), National Institute of Geological Sciences (NIGS)- Project NOAH, Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG), Manila Observatory, National Power Corporation (NAPOCOR), PAGASA, and Office of Civil Defense (OCD) also participated in the workshop.
Source: PhiVolcs Facebook Page
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Thursday, January 23, 2014
Celebration of the National Astronomy Week
The National Astronomy Week (NAW) is an annual event being observed every 3rd week of February. This year the occasion will be celebrated on 17-21 February 2014 with the theme "Building Bonds: Connecting People through Astronomy".
The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA), the agency mandated under Presidential Proclamation No. 130, to spearhead the annual celebration, has prepared the following activities for the whole celebration:
1. Free Planetarium Shows
2. Stargazing and Telescoping Sessions at PAGASA Observatory
3. Star Party Contest for High School Level (First-Come, First-Served Basis)
4. Free Posters in Astronomy to Visiting Schools at the Planetarium and Astronomical Observatory.
The free planetarium shows and lecture and telescoping sessions will be held at the PAGASA Science Garden and Astronomical Observatory, respectively. These activities will be scheduled on a first-come, first-served basis. Planetarium shows will be conducted from 8:00 AM to 5:00 P.M. daily, while telescoping sessions will start at 7:00 o clock nightly.
Interested parties who would like to visit our astronomical facilities during the celebration may call at telephone number 434-2715 for reservation purposes.
2014 Star Party Contest
In connection with the Celebration of the National Astronomy Week on 17-21 February 2014, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA), will conduct the Star Party Contest for the twelve (12) public & private high schools (first-come, first-served basis) on 21 February 2014 at 3:00 pm until dawn at the PAGASA Astronomical Observatory, U.P. Compound, Diliman, Quezon City.
The contest will be open to high school students, both public and private from Metro Manila. The maximum number of contestants is six (6) students who should be members of their school Science Club and one (1) Science adviser.
Star Party Contest rules and regulation will be given/discussed upon registration of the twelve (12) participating schools on 21 February 2014.
The following are the prizes:
1st prize Php 20,000.00
2nd prize Php 15,000.00
3rd prize Php 10,000.00
9 consolation prize Php 2,000.00
Certificates of participation will be issued to all contestants.
For further inquiries, please contact Engr. Dario Dela Cruz, Chief, Space Science and Astronomy Section at telephone number 434-2715 or visit our website at http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/.
source: http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/pressrelease.shtml#StarPartyContest2014
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The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA), the agency mandated under Presidential Proclamation No. 130, to spearhead the annual celebration, has prepared the following activities for the whole celebration:
1. Free Planetarium Shows
2. Stargazing and Telescoping Sessions at PAGASA Observatory
3. Star Party Contest for High School Level (First-Come, First-Served Basis)
4. Free Posters in Astronomy to Visiting Schools at the Planetarium and Astronomical Observatory.
The free planetarium shows and lecture and telescoping sessions will be held at the PAGASA Science Garden and Astronomical Observatory, respectively. These activities will be scheduled on a first-come, first-served basis. Planetarium shows will be conducted from 8:00 AM to 5:00 P.M. daily, while telescoping sessions will start at 7:00 o clock nightly.
Interested parties who would like to visit our astronomical facilities during the celebration may call at telephone number 434-2715 for reservation purposes.
2014 Star Party Contest
In connection with the Celebration of the National Astronomy Week on 17-21 February 2014, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA), will conduct the Star Party Contest for the twelve (12) public & private high schools (first-come, first-served basis) on 21 February 2014 at 3:00 pm until dawn at the PAGASA Astronomical Observatory, U.P. Compound, Diliman, Quezon City.
The contest will be open to high school students, both public and private from Metro Manila. The maximum number of contestants is six (6) students who should be members of their school Science Club and one (1) Science adviser.
Star Party Contest rules and regulation will be given/discussed upon registration of the twelve (12) participating schools on 21 February 2014.
The following are the prizes:
1st prize Php 20,000.00
2nd prize Php 15,000.00
3rd prize Php 10,000.00
9 consolation prize Php 2,000.00
Certificates of participation will be issued to all contestants.
For further inquiries, please contact Engr. Dario Dela Cruz, Chief, Space Science and Astronomy Section at telephone number 434-2715 or visit our website at http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/.
source: http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/pressrelease.shtml#StarPartyContest2014
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Monday, January 13, 2014
Weekly Weather Outlook
WEEKLY OUTLOOK
Issued at: 6:00 p.m. 13 January 2014
Valid until: 6:00 p.m. 20 January 2014
Visayas and the regions of Northern Mindanao and Caraga will experience cloudy skies with moderate to occasionally heavy rainshowers and thunderstorms which may trigger flashfloods and landslides. Bicol Region, MIMAROPA and the rest of Mindanao will have cloudy skies with light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms. Metro Manila and the rest of Luzon will be cloudy with isolated light rains. This weather scenario is expected to persist until tomorrow (January 14). Meanwhile, the Low Pressure Area (LPA) was estimated at 45 km east of Dipolog City.
By Wednesday (January 15), residents in the provinces of Iloilo and Romblon , and over Busuanga and Cuyo in Palawan are alerted against possible flashfloods and/or landslide due to moderate to occasionally heavy rainshowers and thunderstorms. Bicol region, the rest of Visayas and of MIMAROPA and Zamboanga Peninsula will have cloudy skies with light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms while the rest of Mindanao will have good weather apart from isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms. Metro Manila, Northern and Central Luzon will be partly cloudy to cloudy with isolated light rains throughout outlook period.
By Thursday (January 16), Bicol Region, Palawan, Romblon and Eastern Visayas will experience cloudy skies with moderate to occasionally heavy rainshowers and thunderstorms which may trigger flashfloods and landslides. The rest of Visayas, Zamboanga Peninsula and Caraga will be cloudy with light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms. Isolated rainshowers and/or thunderstorm is expected over the rest of of Mindanao.
By Friday (January 17), Palawan will continue to experience moderate to heavy rainshowers and thunderstorms while light to moderate rains is expected over Bicol Region, Marinduque and Romblon. Visayas and Mindanao will have partly cloudy to cloudy with isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms.
By Saturday (January 18), moderate to heavy rainshowers and thunderstorms will continue over Palawan therefore residents are alerted against possible flashfloods and landslides. Bicol region will continue to have light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms. Visayas and Mindanao will have parlty cloudy to cloudy skies with isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms.
By Sunday (January 19), Eastern and Central Visayas and Palawan will have light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms. Mindanao and the rest of Southern Luzon will be partly cloudy with isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms.
By Monday (January 19), Eastern and Central Visayas will have moderate to occasionally heavy rainshowers and thunderstorms while the rest of Visayas and Palawan will have light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms. Mindanao and the rest of Southern Luzon will be partly cloudy with isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms.
This outlook will be updated as soon as significant changes in the weather pattern occurs.
Prepared By:
MFP / ADA / GMQ / JSG
Duty Forecasters
source: http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/wb/wklyOutlook.html
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Issued at: 6:00 p.m. 13 January 2014
Valid until: 6:00 p.m. 20 January 2014
Visayas and the regions of Northern Mindanao and Caraga will experience cloudy skies with moderate to occasionally heavy rainshowers and thunderstorms which may trigger flashfloods and landslides. Bicol Region, MIMAROPA and the rest of Mindanao will have cloudy skies with light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms. Metro Manila and the rest of Luzon will be cloudy with isolated light rains. This weather scenario is expected to persist until tomorrow (January 14). Meanwhile, the Low Pressure Area (LPA) was estimated at 45 km east of Dipolog City.
By Wednesday (January 15), residents in the provinces of Iloilo and Romblon , and over Busuanga and Cuyo in Palawan are alerted against possible flashfloods and/or landslide due to moderate to occasionally heavy rainshowers and thunderstorms. Bicol region, the rest of Visayas and of MIMAROPA and Zamboanga Peninsula will have cloudy skies with light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms while the rest of Mindanao will have good weather apart from isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms. Metro Manila, Northern and Central Luzon will be partly cloudy to cloudy with isolated light rains throughout outlook period.
By Thursday (January 16), Bicol Region, Palawan, Romblon and Eastern Visayas will experience cloudy skies with moderate to occasionally heavy rainshowers and thunderstorms which may trigger flashfloods and landslides. The rest of Visayas, Zamboanga Peninsula and Caraga will be cloudy with light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms. Isolated rainshowers and/or thunderstorm is expected over the rest of of Mindanao.
By Friday (January 17), Palawan will continue to experience moderate to heavy rainshowers and thunderstorms while light to moderate rains is expected over Bicol Region, Marinduque and Romblon. Visayas and Mindanao will have partly cloudy to cloudy with isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms.
By Saturday (January 18), moderate to heavy rainshowers and thunderstorms will continue over Palawan therefore residents are alerted against possible flashfloods and landslides. Bicol region will continue to have light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms. Visayas and Mindanao will have parlty cloudy to cloudy skies with isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms.
By Sunday (January 19), Eastern and Central Visayas and Palawan will have light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms. Mindanao and the rest of Southern Luzon will be partly cloudy with isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms.
By Monday (January 19), Eastern and Central Visayas will have moderate to occasionally heavy rainshowers and thunderstorms while the rest of Visayas and Palawan will have light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms. Mindanao and the rest of Southern Luzon will be partly cloudy with isolated rainshowers or thunderstorms.
This outlook will be updated as soon as significant changes in the weather pattern occurs.
Prepared By:
MFP / ADA / GMQ / JSG
Duty Forecasters
source: http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/wb/wklyOutlook.html
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Monday, December 30, 2013
PAGASA Astronomical Diary JANUARY 2014
Astronomical Diary
JANUARY 2014
Stars and Constellations
The famous equilateral triangle in the sky, known as the Winter Triangle rises after sunset. The Triangle is composed of Betelgeuse, the super giant red star and the prominent star of the famous constellation Orion (the Mighty Hunter), Sirius, the brightest star in the sky of the constellation Canis Major (the Big Dog), and Procyon, the brightest star of the constellation Canis Minor (the Little Dog) as shown in Figures 1 & 1a.
Meteor Shower
The annual Quadrantid meteor shower will be active from January 1 to January 7. The observation of its peak activity is on January 3-4 in which, meteors or “falling stars” can be seen at the rate of at least 40 meteors per hour. The shower will appear to radiate from the constellation of Bootes, as shown in Figures 2 & 2a. The Quadrantid meteor shower hits the Earth’s atmosphere at the rate of about 40 kilometers per second. The incinerated dust are said to be particles apparently derived from the debris ejected by the near-Earth asteroid 2003 EH.
Astrophotography Using PAGASA Telescopes and Camera
Figure 3 & 3a shows the Photograph of astronomical event using PAGASA equipment.
The Planets
On January 1, Venus will be shining at magnitude -3.7 and will be found low in the west southwestern horizon after sunset. It slips down the horizon as days pass by and it will no longer be available for observation after the first week of the month. The Planet will then appear in the morning sky at the last week of the month.
Mercury comes into view on mid-January at the west southwestern horizon. It will be shining at magnitude -1.0 and will have full disk (span of 5 seconds of an arc in diameter) as seen through a telescope.
Neptune and Uranus will be found above the west southwestern sky after sunset and can be observed with the aid of modest-sized telescopes and binoculars under clear skies with the aid of a star map. They will be located among the background stars of the constellations Aquarius, the Water-Bearer and Pisces, the Fish, glowing at magnitudes +5.8 and +7.9, respectively.
Jupiter will dazzle at magnitude -2.7 in the eastern sky after sunset and will be visible in the evening sky throughout the month. It will be found among the background stars of the constellation Gemini, the Twin. This month will provide a perfect opportunity to view the largest planet in the solar system with its alternating series of bright zones and dark belts and with a diameter disk that measure at 47 seconds of an arc.
Saturn rises in the early morning hours during the month. It will be glowing at magnitude +0.6 and will be located within the stars of the constellation of Libra, the Scales. Through a telescope, it will measure at 16 arc of a second across its equator, while the ring spans at 37 and tilt at 22 degrees to our line of sight.
The Red Planet Mars will rise before midnight during the month of January. It will be found among the stars of the constellation of Virgo, the Maiden. By the end of the month, the planets apparent diameter will reach 9 arc of a second through a modest-sized telescope.
PRESS RELEASE : Source http://kidlat.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/agssb/astro_web/astrodiary.html
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JANUARY 2014
Stars and Constellations
The famous equilateral triangle in the sky, known as the Winter Triangle rises after sunset. The Triangle is composed of Betelgeuse, the super giant red star and the prominent star of the famous constellation Orion (the Mighty Hunter), Sirius, the brightest star in the sky of the constellation Canis Major (the Big Dog), and Procyon, the brightest star of the constellation Canis Minor (the Little Dog) as shown in Figures 1 & 1a.
Meteor Shower
The annual Quadrantid meteor shower will be active from January 1 to January 7. The observation of its peak activity is on January 3-4 in which, meteors or “falling stars” can be seen at the rate of at least 40 meteors per hour. The shower will appear to radiate from the constellation of Bootes, as shown in Figures 2 & 2a. The Quadrantid meteor shower hits the Earth’s atmosphere at the rate of about 40 kilometers per second. The incinerated dust are said to be particles apparently derived from the debris ejected by the near-Earth asteroid 2003 EH.
Astrophotography Using PAGASA Telescopes and Camera
Figure 3 & 3a shows the Photograph of astronomical event using PAGASA equipment.
The Planets
On January 1, Venus will be shining at magnitude -3.7 and will be found low in the west southwestern horizon after sunset. It slips down the horizon as days pass by and it will no longer be available for observation after the first week of the month. The Planet will then appear in the morning sky at the last week of the month.
Mercury comes into view on mid-January at the west southwestern horizon. It will be shining at magnitude -1.0 and will have full disk (span of 5 seconds of an arc in diameter) as seen through a telescope.
Neptune and Uranus will be found above the west southwestern sky after sunset and can be observed with the aid of modest-sized telescopes and binoculars under clear skies with the aid of a star map. They will be located among the background stars of the constellations Aquarius, the Water-Bearer and Pisces, the Fish, glowing at magnitudes +5.8 and +7.9, respectively.
Jupiter will dazzle at magnitude -2.7 in the eastern sky after sunset and will be visible in the evening sky throughout the month. It will be found among the background stars of the constellation Gemini, the Twin. This month will provide a perfect opportunity to view the largest planet in the solar system with its alternating series of bright zones and dark belts and with a diameter disk that measure at 47 seconds of an arc.
Saturn rises in the early morning hours during the month. It will be glowing at magnitude +0.6 and will be located within the stars of the constellation of Libra, the Scales. Through a telescope, it will measure at 16 arc of a second across its equator, while the ring spans at 37 and tilt at 22 degrees to our line of sight.
The Red Planet Mars will rise before midnight during the month of January. It will be found among the stars of the constellation of Virgo, the Maiden. By the end of the month, the planets apparent diameter will reach 9 arc of a second through a modest-sized telescope.
PRESS RELEASE : Source http://kidlat.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/agssb/astro_web/astrodiary.html
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Wednesday, December 5, 2012
TY Pablo Update #PabloPH
For Weather Update Follow PAGASA Twitter Account http://twitter.com/dost_pagasa and Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/PAGASA.DOST.GOV.PH
This is the 14th Bulletin of PAGASA for TY Pablo Issued at 11 pm December 5, 2012
Typhoon "PABLO" has maintained its strength and continues to move west northwestward slowly.
Source http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/wb/tcupdate.shtml
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Thursday, August 9, 2012
PAGASA Rainfall Warning Signal Modified
The PAGASA Rainfall Warning System (RWS) is in operational mode since its launching on June 20, 2012 but is still open for suggestions to improve it. The initial color coding: YELLOW, GREEN, RED was used based on the color coding scheme of the Community-Based Flood Early Warning System (CBFEWS) under the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) project.
Effective today, the code GREEN of the RWS is changed to ORANGE such that the warning levels are now YELLOW, ORANGE and RED. These colors are generally associated with awareness, preparedness and emergency respectively.
The color ORANGE was adopted as it is a more appropriate representation of the severity of the situation. This was based on suggestions after our Information Education Campaign (IEC) efforts with the media and discussions with the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC), Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) and Department of Interior and Local Government-National Capital Region (DILG-NCR).
source : http://kidlat.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/pressrelease.shtml![]() |
Image from Gov.ph |
Rainfall Warning Signal of PAGASA started with YELLOW GREEN RED. People are confused with said coloring signal. At the midst of test pilot month people are suggesting to change GREEN Warning to ORANGE warning, because GREEN is said to be GO signal for traffic. Rainfall warning signal was tested versus the Enhance Southwest Monsoon (HABAGAT) due to TY GENER (SAOLA) People are still confused about the warning specially the GREEN Warning. PAGASA technical working group are on discussion about the suggestion and recommendation of the people. But before it was finalized here come's the rains brought by the HABAGAT. Changing or modification of the Color coding that may lead to more confusion the first rainfall warning was used.
For the first month of implementation people are still hoping to change the Color Scheme and on August 9, 2012. GREEN is changed to ORANGE,
"This is to inform the Public that the Code GREEN in the PAGASA Rainfall Warning System is changed to ORANGE effective today, Aug 9, 2012. The rainfall warning levels are now "YELLOW, ORANGE, RED" the colors associated with awareness, preparedness and emergency. DOST-PAGASA"
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image from GOV.ph |
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image for NDRRMC |
Issued at: 12:20 PM, 09 August 2012 (Thursday)
Target Areas: Metro Manila
Light to Moderate rainfall (1.0-7.0 mm/hr) are observed for the past 2 hours.
With this development, all Rainfall Warnings are now TERMINATED.
People are still advised to monitor the weather condition and watch out for next updates.
Areas under states of Calaity after the HAGUPIT of HABAGAT.
Weather Advisory No. 7
For: Southwest monsoon
Issued at: 11:00 AM, 09 August 2012
The Southwest Monsoon (HABAGAT) will continue to bring moderate occasional to frequent rains over Luzon particularly along the Provinces of Ilocos, La Union, Pangasinan, Zambales, Pampanga, Bataan and Bulacan today with gradual improvement of weather condition tomorrow and to the weekend.
Threats of flashfloods and floods in low lying areas and landslides in mountainous areas as well as lahar flows over pinatubo will gradually decrease. Residents living in those areas are still warned against the danger of these hazards that may occur.
The next update will be incorporated in the Public Weather Forecast at 5:00 pm today while the next advisory will be issued at 11:00 am tomorrow.
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Friday, June 29, 2012
Executive Order No. 66, s. 2012 (PRESCRIBING RULES ON THE CANCELLATION OR SUSPENSION OF CLASSES AND WORK IN GOVERNMENT OFFICES DUE TO TYPHOONS, FLOODING, OTHER WEATHER DISTURBANCES, AND CALAMITIES)
WHEREAS, it is a declared policy of the State to uphold the people’s constitutional rights to life, health, safety and property and to promote the general welfare of its people at all times, especially during disasters and calamities;
WHEREAS, it is likewise the declared policy of the State to institutionalize the policies, structures, coordination mechanism and programs on disaster risk reduction from national down to local levels; recognize the local risk patterns across the country and strengthen the capacity of Local Government Units (LGUs) for disaster risk reduction and management through decentralized powers, responsibilities, and resources at the regional and local levels;
WHEREAS, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) is the agency of the government mandated to observe and report the weather of the Philippines and specified adjacent areas, and to issue forecasts and warnings of weather and flood condition affecting national safety, welfare and economy;
WHEREAS, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) is a government entity mandated to establish a national early warning and emergency alert system to provide accurate and timely advice to national or local emergency response organizations and to the general public through diverse mass media; and recommend to the President the declaration of a state of calamity in areas extensively damaged; and
WHEREAS, there is a need to streamline the procedure in the suspension of classes and work in government offices in times of typhoons, floods and other disasters or calamities to spare the pupils, students, government workers and the general public from unnecessary dangers to their lives and limbs.
NOW, THEREFORE, I BENIGNO S. AQUINO III, President of the Philippines, by virtue of the powers vested in me by law, do hereby order;
Section 1. Automatic Cancellation or Suspension of Classes and Work in Government Offices, The following guidelines shall be followed for the automatic cancellation or suspension of classes in all public and private elementary, secondary and tertiary schools, as well as work in all government offices:
a. When Signal No. 1 is raised by PAGASA, classes at the pre-school level, in the affected area, shall be automatically cancelled or suspended.
b. When Signal No. 2 is raised by PAGASA, classes at the pre-school, elementary and secondary levels, in the affected area, shall be automatically cancelled or suspended,
c. When Signal No. 3 or higher is raised by PAGASA, classes at pre-school, elementary, secondary, and tertiary levels, in the affected area, including graduate school, as well as work in all government offices, shall be automatically cancelled or suspended.
The PAGASA shall issue weather forecasts through various media outlets (radio and television), and the NDRRMC, not later than 10:00 PM of the previous day and 4:30 AM of the day of the intended cancellation of classes and work. In cases where there are classes and work in the morning and suspension of classes and work is only effective in the afternoon, PAGASA should issue the forecast not later than 11:00 AM of the said day.
Section 2. Localized Cancellation or Suspension of Classes and Work in Government Offices. In the absence of typhoon signal warnings from PAGASA, localized cancellation or suspension of classes and work in government offices may be implemented by local chief executives, as chairmen of the Local Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (LDRRMC) concerned, in coordination with PAGASA and the NDRRMC, specifically in flood-prone or high risk areas.
Announcements will be made not later than 4:30 AM of the day of the intended cancellation of classes and work, or not later than 11:00 AM for suspension of work and classes in the afternoon session, through diverse mass media, particularly radio and television, landline communications and other technologies for communication within the community or locality.
Section 3. Cancellation or Suspension of Classes and Work in the Government During Other Calamities. Classes in all levels in both public and private schools as well as work in the government offices may be cancelled or suspended in areas affected by disasters or calamities other than typhoons, such as but not limited to floods, earthquakes, tsunami and conflagration, upon the declaration by the President of a State of Calamity based on the recommendation of the NDRRMC.
The concerned Local Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office (LDRRMO) headed by the local chief executive shall be responsible for announcing the suspension of classes and work in the government offices in the affected areas in coordination with the NDRRMC, through all forms of mass media available under the circumstances.
Section 4. Maintenance of Work Force. In the event of cancellation or suspension of work in government offices due to any of the foregoing circumstances, the following government agencies, particularly those directly involved in disaster risk reduction and management, shall maintain the operations of their respective offices to ensure the continuity of the delivery of services to the public:
a. Office of the Executive Secretary
b. Department of National Defense
c. Department of the Interior and Local Government
d. Department of Social Welfare and Development
e. Department of Science and Technology
f. Department of Health
g. Department of Public Works and Highways
h. Department of Education
i. Other agencies whose operations the President or the NDRRMC may deem necessary.
The Heads of Offices of the foregoing agencies shall determine which of their respective divisions or units, particularly those related to disaster risk reduction and management, shall maintain its operations.
Section 5. Report to the President. The NDRRMC chaired by the Secretary of National Defense shall immediately inform the Office of the President, through the Executive Secretary, of the cancellation or suspension of classes and work in government offices in the affected areas.
Section 6. Concurrent Authority. The Office of the President, through the Executive Secretary, shall have concurrent authority with the NDRRMC to cancel or suspend classes and work in government offices in the affected areas.
Section 7. Repeal. All issuances, orders, rules and regulations or parts thereof, inconsistent with this Executive Order are hereby repealed, amended or modified accordingly.
Section 8. Effectivity. This Executive Order shall take effect immediately.
DONE, in the City of Manila, this 9th day of January in the year of our Lord, Two Thousand and TwelveOriginal Article from : http://www.gov.ph/2012/01/09/executive-order-no-66-s-2012/
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