Tropical Cyclone 27P (South Pacific) — Latest Overview
This page summarizes what is currently known about Tropical Cyclone 27P and answers common questions people search for (track, intensity, location, and impacts). It is written for readers looking for quick, practical storm information.
Current status (as of 17 Mar 2026)
- System: Tropical Cyclone 27P (South Pacific basin designation)
- Recent intensity estimates: roughly 40–60 knots (about 75–110 km/h) based on the latest available event data
- Recent position: near 12–13°S, 155–157°E (western South Pacific)
- Trend: strengthening indicated in the most recent points (40 kt → 55 kt → 60 kt over 12 hours)
Note: “27P” is an operational identifier used for tropical systems in the South Pacific region. Public-facing names and official warnings may be issued by regional meteorological services depending on where the storm is located and which warning area it enters.
Where is Tropical Cyclone 27P right now?
Based on the latest available coordinates, the center has been located in the western South Pacific near 155–157°E and 12–13°S. That places it in the broader region east of northern Australia and near island chains of the southwest Pacific.
Because tropical cyclones can wobble and change speed, use official regional forecast tracks for precise, time-stamped positions.
How strong is Tropical Cyclone 27P?
Recent intensity values associated with the event indicate winds around 60 knots at the latest timestamp. Wind estimates can vary by agency and method (satellite analysis, scatterometer passes, and model guidance). If the system is named by a regional center, you may see intensity expressed in:
- 10-minute sustained winds (common in Australia/Fiji/New Zealand warning products)
- 1-minute sustained winds (used by some other agencies)
When comparing numbers, confirm which averaging period is being used.
Forecast and track: what to watch for
Even without a full official forecast track embedded on this page, people tracking 27P typically want to know the same key items. Here’s what to monitor over the next 24–72 hours:
- Steering pattern: shifts in subtropical ridges and nearby troughs can change direction quickly.
- Wind shear: increasing shear can weaken or displace thunderstorms from the center.
- Sea surface temperatures and ocean heat: warm waters support intensification; cooler waters or upwelling can reduce strength.
- Dry air intrusion: can erode the core and limit strengthening.
- Land interaction: passing near islands can disrupt the circulation and change the track.
Potential impacts (what residents and travelers should prepare for)
Impacts depend on the exact track and intensity, but tropical cyclones in this region commonly bring:
- Damaging winds (downed trees, power outages, structural damage)
- Heavy rainfall (flash flooding, river flooding, landslides in steep terrain)
- Dangerous seas and surf (coastal erosion, hazardous marine conditions)
- Storm surge in low-lying coastal areas if the core approaches land
If you are in or traveling to the western South Pacific, check local advisories for watches/warnings, evacuation guidance, and marine restrictions.
Frequently asked questions (SEO-focused)
Is Tropical Cyclone 27P named?
“27P” is a numbered identifier. Whether it has a public name depends on the responsible regional warning center and whether the system meets naming criteria in that area. If you see a named cyclone in official bulletins for the same location/time, it may correspond to 27P.
What category is Tropical Cyclone 27P?
Category depends on the basin’s scale and the wind averaging period (10-minute vs 1-minute). With winds near 60 knots, the system may be near the threshold of a strong tropical storm or a lower-end cyclone category on some regional scales. Always use the category stated in local official warnings.
Will Tropical Cyclone 27P hit land?
Landfall risk depends on the forecast track. Monitor official track maps and local warnings for the islands and coastal regions in the projected path. Small track shifts can significantly change which communities see the strongest winds and heaviest rain.
How do I find the most reliable updates?
Use your national meteorological service and regional warning centers for your area, plus local emergency management. For satellite context, NASA and other public satellite portals can be helpful for visualizing cloud structure.
Data source used for this page
This page references the publicly available NASA EONET event entry for Tropical Cyclone 27P:
Related news coverage
No up-to-date, verifiable news articles were returned by the SERP tool for the exact keyword “Tropical Cyclone 27P” at the time this page was generated. To avoid linking to incorrect or unrelated coverage, no news links are included here.
If you have alternate search terms (for example, a storm name used by local agencies, or the affected island/country), this section can be updated with direct links to relevant reporting.
