Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Tropical Cyclone Pola to bring rain, gusty winds to Fiji and Tonga after flooding American Samoa

By Eric Leister, AccuWeather senior meteorologist




Parts of Samoa and American Samoa were inundated with heavy rainfall in recent days as a tropical system took shape to the west of the islands.
On Tuesday, this tropical threat organized into Tropical Cyclone Pola as it moved southward near Fiji and Tonga.
Pola is current a Category 1 tropical cyclone, based on the Fiji tropical scale, with winds equal to a tropical storm in the Atlantic Ocean.
Despite tracking farther from American Samoa and Samoa, bouts of heavy rain will affect the islands into Friday.
Additional rainfall amounts of 150-300 mm (6-12 inches) are expected across the islands during this time.
Pola Map
As Pola tracks southward in the coming days, it will travel between Fiji and Tonga, sparing the islands from the cyclone’s worst impacts.
Despite the strongest winds and heaviest rainfall occurring largely between Fiji and Tonga, the region will still be at risk for flooding downpours and locally strong winds.
Across Fiji, the Lau and Lomaiviti Groups will be most at risk for downpours and locally damaging winds into Wednesday night.
The remainder of Fiji can expect occasional showers and a gusty thunderstorm the next few days.
In Tonga, western parts of Ha’apai Group and Tongatapu Group will endure the most severe impacts, with heavy rainfall and locally damaging winds possible into Thursday morning.
Rainfall of 50-100 mm (2-4 inches) with local amounts up to 200 mm (8 inches) are possible.
Wind gusts of 65-80 km/h (40-50 mph) are possible during the worst conditions from the storm.
Rough surf and seas will also be hazards to bathers and anyone with marine interests across all of Fiji and Tonga into the day on Thursday.
Conditions will improve across the region late this week into this weekend; however, there will continue to be the risk for daily showers and thunderstorms.
Pola is the fifth named tropical cyclone of the season in the Fiji region, but the fourth to affect the region since the start of the year.
During a normal season, which runs from Nov. 1 to April 30, six to eight named tropical cyclones track across the Fiji region.
Download the AccuWeather app to find out what the conditions will be for your area.

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