Tropical Cyclone Vaianu
Apr 9 at 6:00 AM
This storm is currently active and is being monitored for any changes.
Wind speeds range from 34 to 63 knots, indicating moderate danger.
The current wind speed is significantly lower than the maximum recorded speed.
The storm was last reported moving in a south-east direction.
Tropical Cyclone Vaianu: Latest Overview
Tropical Cyclone Vaianu is an active severe-storm event tracked under the “Severe Storms” category. The information below summarizes the most recent position and intensity points provided in the dataset, along with the observed trend over time.
Current status (latest data point)
- Latest timestamp (UTC): 2026-04-09T06:00:00Z
- Location (lon, lat): 179.0, -26.8
- Estimated intensity: 55 kts
- Event state: Not marked as closed in the provided data
Track summary (based on provided points)
From 2026-04-05T00:00:00Z to 2026-04-09T06:00:00Z, the storm’s reported positions shift toward higher longitude values (eastward) and more negative latitude values (southward). This indicates a general movement toward the southeast over the period covered by the dataset.
Intensity trend
The storm’s reported intensity increases steadily early in the record, peaks, and then weakens:
- Start of record: 40 kts at 2026-04-05T00:00:00Z (171.8, -13.8)
- Peak intensity (maximum reported): 100 kts at 2026-04-07T00:00:00Z (174.8, -18.1) and again at 2026-04-07T06:00:00Z (175.3, -19.2)
- Latest intensity: 55 kts at 2026-04-09T06:00:00Z (179.0, -26.8)
Key timeline points
- Rapid strengthening phase: 40 kts (2026-04-05T00:00Z) to 80 kts (2026-04-06T00:00Z)
- Highest reported winds: 100 kts during 2026-04-07T00:00Z to 2026-04-07T06:00Z
- Weakening phase: 95 kts (2026-04-07T12:00Z) down to 55 kts by 2026-04-09T06:00Z
Data provenance (as provided)
- Event ID: EONET_19329
- Primary source listed: JTWC
- Measurements shown: Point locations with intensity in knots (kts) at 6-hour intervals
Note: This overview is limited to the coordinates, timestamps, and wind-speed values included in the provided dataset. No additional impacts, warnings, or land interaction details are stated in the data and are therefore not included here.
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Tropical Cyclone Vaianu: latest track, intensity, and safety information
Current status (based on the latest available public track points)
Tropical Cyclone Vaianu has been tracked moving generally south to south-southeast across the South Pacific during to . The strongest listed intensity in the provided track points is 100 knots (around 185 km/h or 115 mph) on , before weakening to about 55 knots by .
Important: This page summarizes the storm using the track data supplied with your prompt. For official warnings and local impacts, always rely on your national meteorological service and emergency management agency.
Track overview (where the storm has been)
The provided coordinates show Vaianu starting near 13.8°S, 171.8°E on April 5 and progressing to near 26.8°S, 179.0°E by April 9. This indicates a steady movement toward higher latitudes (cooler waters), which often contributes to weakening and/or transition to an extratropical system.
- Early period: near 14–16°S and 172–174°E (April 5–6)
- Peak period: near 18–19°S and 174–175°E (April 7)
- Later period: near 22–27°S and 177–179°E (April 8–9)
Intensity timeline (from the supplied points)
Below is a simplified intensity timeline using the maximum sustained wind values included in the track points:
- : ~40–80 kt (strengthening)
- : ~90–95 kt (major cyclone strength)
- : 100 kt peak (then gradual weakening)
- : ~80 kt down to ~60 kt
- : ~55 kt (continued weakening)
Wind speed alone does not describe total risk. Rainfall, storm surge, wave conditions, and the storm’s forward speed can drive impacts even as winds decrease.
What people are searching for (answers to common questions)
Is Tropical Cyclone Vaianu expected to make landfall?
The track points provided here show Vaianu moving southward across open ocean coordinates. Whether it makes landfall depends on the official forecast track and any later changes not included in the supplied data. Check your local meteorological service for the latest forecast cone and warnings.
Which areas could see impacts?
Even without a direct landfall, islands and coastal regions near the storm’s path can experience:
- dangerous surf and rip currents
- storm surge and coastal inundation in low-lying areas
- heavy rain leading to flash flooding and landslides
- damaging wind gusts in squalls and outer rainbands
How strong is 100 knots?
100 knots is roughly 185 km/h (115 mph). In many South Pacific basins, that corresponds to a severe tropical cyclone capable of widespread damage, especially to weaker structures and vegetation, and can produce dangerous seas.
When is the storm likely to weaken?
The supplied points already show weakening after April 7 as the cyclone moves farther south. Tropical cyclones often weaken over cooler waters and in stronger wind shear, and may transition into an extratropical low while still producing hazardous winds and seas.
Safety guidance (practical checklist)
- Follow official alerts: monitor your national meteorological service and emergency management updates.
- Prepare for power outages: charge devices, have batteries, and keep a flashlight and radio.
- Flood readiness: clear drains, avoid driving through floodwater, and move valuables above expected flood levels.
- Coastal hazards: stay off beaches and reefs during large swell; obey marine advisories.
- Boaters: secure vessels early; conditions can deteriorate quickly well away from the center.
News and official updates
No verifiable, up-to-date news articles were returned by the SERP tool for “Tropical Cyclone Vaianu” at the time this page was generated. To avoid posting incorrect or fabricated links, this section will be updated once real coverage is available from reputable outlets.
In the meantime, use trusted local sources (national meteorological services, emergency management agencies, and major regional broadcasters) for the latest advisories and impact reports.
Data notes
The storm track points referenced on this page come from the dataset included in your prompt (dates, coordinates, and wind speeds in knots). If you have additional sources (for example, a national meteorological service advisory page), provide them and this page can be expanded with verified links and localized impact details.
🤖 This content is auto-generated.