Typhoon Molave killed at least nine people and left 13 others missing in the Philippines, according to disaster-response officials, before heading over to the South China Sea on its way to Vietnam.
The storm affected more than 900,000 in the Philippines before exiting at about 8:00 a.m. on Tuesday. It’s seen to further intensify over the sea and reach its peak within 24 hours, the Philippine weather bureau said.
The northern area of Vietnam’s Central Highlands, home to the country’s coffee producers, is forecast to receive as much as 200 millimeters of rain from Tuesday evening, according to a local meteorological center.
Vietnam has evacuated nearly 1.3 million central region residents in the past seven days as the country was hit first by Storm Saudel and now braces for Molave, according to the government website. One hundred and eleven people have died during a series of storms and landslides along the central coast and highlands between Oct. 6 and 20. Twenty-two people are missing.
Topics Catastrophe Natural Disasters
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.

CFC Owners Said to Tap Banks for Sale, IPO of £5 Billion Insurer
Insurify Starts App With ChatGPT to Allow Consumers to Shop for Insurance
Lemonade Books Q4 Net Loss of $21.7M as Customer Count Grows
Insurance Broker Stocks Sink as AI App Sparks Disruption Fears 

