Typhoon Fung-wong, now considered a super typhoon, is approaching to make landfall on the Eastern Philippines coast on Sunday night.
HAPPENING NOW: Strong Winds Shake Camaligan’s Hanging Bridge.
— Weather Monitor (@WeatherMonitors) November 9, 2025
Strong gusts from Typhoon Fung-wong (#UwanPH) caused a famous hanging bridge in Camaligan, Camarines Sur, Philippines, to sway dangerously.
Source: Richard Cecilio, DWIZ 95.1 South Luzon pic.twitter.com/z63SdyWuOd
The massive storm has a radius that spans the entire country.
Videos online show strong winds shaking bridges and flooding the north-eastern coastline of the country.
Super Typhoon Uwan (Fung-wong) is battering Luzon, Philippines with peak winds of 215 km/h and gusts up to 230 km/h. #UwanPH
— GeoTechWar (@geotechwar) November 9, 2025
Over a million people have evacuated in Catanduanes, Camarines Sur, Aurora, and neighboring provinces, with Signal No. 5 hoisted.
Life-threatening storm… pic.twitter.com/wF1w33pOg9
One person has been reported dead. Over one million people had to be evacuated from high-risk areas as authorities asked residents to seek immediate shelter.
Fung-wong has a 1,600-kilometre rain and wind band. It has a wind speed of 185 kilometres per hour near the centre and brought gusts with speeds up to 230 kph, the Philippines weather service reported.
Strong winds and heavy rainfall were caused by Super Typhoon Uwan in Virac, Catanduanes, Philippines 🇵🇭 pic.twitter.com/Qs0ZaF7AfG
— Disaster News (@Top_Disaster) November 9, 2025
The storm is also expected to bring rainfall of 200 millimetres or more and create “extensive flooding, not only in low-lying areas,” Benison Estareja, a government meteorologist, said in a press conference.
The Typhoon arrived just days after Storm Kalmagi, which left 204 dead and 109 missing.
The country sees about 20 storms or typhoons hit its coasts every year. The most affected parts are often the poorest areas.
Scientists say that storms are becoming more powerful due to the human-driven climate crisis. Ocean warming allows typhoons to strengthen rapidly, and a warmer climate holds more moisture and brings heavier rainfall.