MANILA, Philippines – The tropical depression being monitored outside the Philippine Area of Responsibility entered PAR at 5:30 pm on Tuesday, February 3.
It was given the local name Basyang, as the country’s second tropical cyclone for 2026. The first was Tropical Storm Ada (Nokaen) in January.
Basyang was last spotted 965 kilometers east of northeastern Mindanao at 10 pm on Tuesday, moving west at only 10 kilometers per hour (km/h).
The tropical depression still has maximum sustained winds of 55 km/h and gustiness of up to 70 km/h.
But the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) said in its 11 pm bulletin that Basyang may strengthen into a tropical storm by Wednesday, February 4, before gradually weakening back into a tropical depression by Friday, February 6, as it hits land.
Basyang is now seen to make landfall in the eastern part of Mindanao or the southern part of Eastern Visayas by Thursday evening, February 5, or Friday morning. Afterwards, it could cross Mindanao and the Visayas until Saturday, February 7, then make landfall in or pass close to the northern portion of Palawan on Sunday, February 8.
While Basyang remains far from land, its trough or extension may already be causing scattered rain and thunderstorms in Eastern Visayas, Central Visayas, the Negros Island Region, Caraga, the Davao Region, Northern Mindanao, and the Zamboanga Peninsula.
Starting Thursday, several regions in the Visayas and Mindanao will be experiencing significant rainfall directly due to Basyang. These areas should brace for floods and landslides:
Wednesday evening, February 4, to Thursday evening, February 5
Thursday evening, February 5, to Friday evening, February 6
As early as Wednesday, Signal No. 1 may also be raised in Caraga, in anticipation of strong winds from the tropical cyclone.
The highest possible tropical cyclone wind signal due to Basyang is Signal No. 2.
PAGASA added that the surge of the northeast monsoon or amihan is bringing strong to gale-force gusts to the following areas:
Wednesday, February 4
Thursday, February 5
On Wednesday, conditions in certain seaboards will already be dangerous, especially for small vessels.
Up to very rough seas (travel is risky for all vessels)
Up to rough seas (small vessels should not venture out to sea)
Up to moderate seas (small vessels should take precautionary measures or avoid sailing, if possible)
PAGASA previously estimated there would be up to one tropical cyclone in February. – Rappler.com


