‘Strongest Storm on Earth’ targets Taiwan and China

BEIJING – Taiwan and China are bracing for Supertyphoon Meranti which is forecast to make landfall on China tomorrow (Thursday) with torrential rains and dangerous winds.

The storm is the strongest since Supertyphoon Haiyan devastated the Philippines in 2013, and it is the biggest to near Taiwan since 1959, the CNN reports.

About 150,000 people have been evacuated and 260,000 households have lost power in counties across southern Taiwan, authorities said. Almost 400 domestic and international flights have been canceled.

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Meranti rose quickly from being a Category-1 storm to the highest level of Category 5 in a period of 24 hours early this week, with winds reaching up to 230 mph.

The monster storm is the strongest anywhere in the world this year, and is among the “deepest tropical cyclones ever recorded anywhere on earth,” according to the forecast site Weather Underground.

As of Wednesday afternoon local time, the supertyphoon was brushing past the southern tip of the island of 23.5 million.

Meranti will not make landfall, though heavy rain and winds over 74 mph will likely hit most of the island’s southern land area.

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