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Sunday, November 23, 2025

Wildfire South Korea Nov 23 Gangwon Province- 2 reports- 3.5 hr NewsX live stream & DawnNews Pakistan- Watch & read Heating Planet blog

1st video: Wildfire in Gangwon Province was fully contained at around 10 am local time on Sunday after forcing overnight evacuations in South Korea's northeast. The fire began Saturday evening triggering a level one forest fire response and evacuation of residents. WATCH Wildfire Contained in South Korea’s Gangwon Province After Evacuations, Firefighters Battle Blaze- DawnNews Nov 23- report cont'd below
[
DawnNews English Pakistan on YouTube since May 2022] REPORT cont'd- (twice translated to get to Hearing Planet blog):
Authorities deployed more than 300 personnel overnight and at day break 26 helicopters to suppress the flames. Footage released by the Korea Forest Service shows flames on a mountainside as crews work to contain them. No residential areas were damaged. Officials said the wildfire burned roughly 22.5 hectares and the cause remains under investigation.
***
BELOW 2nd  videoFirefighters in Gangwon Province, South Korea, struggle to control a large wildfire threatening homes and forests, as emergency teams work tirelessly to contain the blaze.3.5 hours Streamed live Nov 23- WATCH:ABOVE South Korea Wildfire LIVE: Firefighters Battle Massive Blaze In Gangwon Provinc| NewsX World 
[KE: Everything climate scientists predicted about global warming/ climate change  since the 1970s is coming true, only faster]

Fina Cat 4 cyclone "sudden explosion in strength" GeoNature Nov 23 Australia evening news report w transcript at Heating Planet blog

Super Cyclone Fina has rapidly intensified into a Category 4 monster over the Timor Sea Sunday Nov 23, slamming the Northern Territory of Australia with destructive winds, power outages, and severe coastal flooding. A dangerous storm track still unfolding, authorities are warning that conditions may worsen in the next hours. This video breaks down the impact zones, storm surge risks, and why this sudden explosion in strength is raising concerns across the entire Pacific region, including potential sea-level abnormalities and regional ocean threats. WATCH BREAKING: Super Cyclone FINA STRIKES AUSTRALIA — Cat 4 Monster Hits Darwin- GeoNature Nov 23 report, transcript follows-[ABC Australia called it Cat 3; GeoNature is more credible, to me, as it's Independent]

TRANSCRIPT

***

Just hours ago, an unprecedented category 4 cyclone slammed straight into Darwin. Over 20,000 homes have been plunged into darkness. The airport is forced to a standstill, and emergency services are overwhelmed. History remembers the devastation of Tracy, but Fina is rewriting everything we thought we knew about Australia's cyclone threats. What triggered this explosive landfall, and why are experts warning that the danger is far from over? 

Cyclone FINA's core is now tracking wests southwest just off the Darwin coastline. According to the Bureau of Meteorologies latest update, sustained winds remain above 205 kmh with gusts reported even higher along exposed suburbs. The official track map shows the system hugging the Timorr Sea, maintaining its intensity as it feeds on warm ocean water. Over 20,000 homes across Darwin and surrounding areas are without power, confirmed by the Northern Territory Power and Water Corporation as of Saturday evening. 

Suburbs from Nightcliffe to Palmerston sit in darkness with power crews unable to reach major feeder lines due to downed trees and live wires blocking access roads. Darwin International Airport was closed to all flights shortly before the worst winds struck. The last scheduled departures raced the storm with the final aircraft leaving under emergency protocols. 

Airport authorities secured hangers and grounded equipment as wind gusts exceeded safe operational limits. All commercial flights remain suspended until further notice and the terminal is locked down for safety. 1.33

Emergency services are stretched thin. The state emergency service command center reports a surge in calls for help. Collapsed roofs, blocked roads, and people trapped by flood waters. State emergency service teams have been forced to triage incidents, prioritizing life-threatening situations as conditions worsen. Relief crews are on standby, but many neighborhoods remain cut off by debris and rising water. 

A senior state emergency service leader said they are dealing with a scale of impact not seen in decades. Our teams are working around the clock and we urge everyone to shelter in place and avoid all non-essential travel until the all clear is given. 

This is the current reality on the ground. A city of more than 150,000 battered by a category  cyclone facing widespread outages and operational paralysis as the storm's core grinds along the coast. 

Cyclone Tracy hit Darwin on Christmas morning  with winds so fierce that nearly three out of every four homes were destroyed. The city was left unrecognizable. Roofs were ripped off, entire neighborhoods were flattened, and more than 35,000 people were forced to evacuate. Tracy's devastation triggered a complete overhaul of building codes across Northern Australia. New standards demanded stronger tie downs, reinforced roofs, and cyclone shutters on windows. For decades, these rules shaped every new home and public building in Darwin. But the memory of Tracy never faded. 

3.00

Each cyclone season, its shadow loomed over emergency planning and public warnings. In 2011, Cyclone Yasi struck Queensland as a category 5 giant. Its windfield stretched more than 500 km from the center, an area larger than some European countries. While Yassi spared Darwin, it reignited debate about whether the city's defenses could withstand another direct hit. 

Engineers and local councils reviewed building approvals, especially in new waterfront developments and housing estates. Questions surfaced about construction shortcuts and whether all properties truly met the post Tracy code during Yasi. Some experts warned that even the toughest standards might not be enough if a storm matched the scale of Tracy or exceeded it. 

Today, as FINA's winds lash Darwin, the city's resilience is being tested again. The lessons from Tracy and Yasi are written in every emergency manual and council regulation. But the true measure lies in how these buildings, roads, and shelters hold up under real world pressure. 

For Darwin, history is not just a memory. It is the baseline for survival. With FINA's core holding just offshore, the most likely scenario is now playing out. The storm's main windfield, measured at a radius of maximum winds between 25 and 35 km, remains over the open Timor Sea. That means the city escapes the absolute worst. But intense conditions persist. 

Gale force winds still sweep across coastal suburbs, toppling trees and sending debris through empty streets. Rainfall totals are climbing fast with forecasts calling for from 100 to 200 mm of additional rain over the next 24 hours. Low-lying streets and parks are already underwater and drainage systems are overwhelmed. Cleanup will be measured in weeks, not days. 

4.50

For most residents, the immediate threat is from falling branches, flash flooding, and extended power outages, not catastrophic building loss. Emergency crews are focused on clearing blocked roads, and restoring essential services, but access remains limited. 

While the offshore path spares Darwin from direct core impact, the practical challenges are far from over. Flooded roads, downed power lines, and battered neighborhoods will persist. 

A sudden shift in FINA's path sends a ripple of uncertainty through coastal communities west of Darwin. At Wagit Beach, the memory of Cyclone Tracy, 1974, still runs deep. Hours before official transport could reach them, local elders organized their own evacuation. A convoy of four-wheel drives packed with families and supplies pulled out ahead of the worst winds. Guided by stories passed down from the last time the city faced a storm of this scale, teenagers ran door to door, warning neighbors who had not heard the latest updates, the decision to move early was not easy. Police and emergency crews urged patience, promising buses would come. But the community trusted their own instincts, shaped by decades of living with the sea. Their gamble paid off. The group crossed the causeway just before rising water made the route impassible. 

6.05

In moments like these, official forecasts and ensemble models matter, but so does the hard won knowledge of those who have survived before. For many along the coast, contingency planning is not just a policy. It is a lifeline. 

Storm surge is now the most dangerous variable. Model projections from the Bureau of Meteorology and ADCIRC show that if cyclone FINA's peak winds align with high tide, water levels could rise 2 to 2.4 m above the normal mark. That is enough to push the sea hundreds of meters inland across the lowest suburbs. 

Nightcliffe, the waterfront precinct Bay View, and parts of Cajarina sit at the highest risk. In these zones, a surge of this magnitude would flood ground floors, submerge car parks, and cut off evacuation routes in less than an hour. Power substations and ferry terminals could go under, and even hospital access roads may become impassible if the water over tops 2 m. 

This scenario is rare, but it is not theoretical. Cyclone Tracy's 1974 surge reached nearly 1.9 m, and FINA's modeled worst case now exceeds that. The timing is critical. The surge threat peaks if the cyclone's strongest winds arrive just as the tide crests around 8 p.m. tonight.

Residents in low-lying areas must monitor official surge alerts and be ready to move at a moment's notice. Maritime warnings are now in effect across the Timor Sea. At 4 p.m. ACST, the Bureau of Meteorology issued a shipping advisory after tide gauges recorded abnormal surges and long period swells radiating outward from FINA's core. 

Cargo vessels and offshore rigs have been instructed to avoid exposed routes with Indonesian and T-OREST ports activating their own alert protocols. Marine safety bulletins highlight unpredictable wave sets and rapid changes in water level for crews at sea and port authorities along northern Australia. Every update matters. Conditions can shift in minutes. All maritime operators are urged to check the latest advisories and stay clear of danger zones. END OF TRANSCRIPT [ideo continues with info about Emergency Services for one more minute.] 

Previous post ABC called Fina a Category 3 https://cityofangels25.blogspot.com/2025/11/fina-cat-3-cyclone-brushed-southern-tip.html

[Fina was a category 3 that might breeze by the Northern Territory Coast and then move on, when I posted these 2 posts about the typhoon yesterday.

This morning, I see that it was a category 4 Mega typhoon slamming the entire Australian West Coast all day their Sunday while I was sleeping Saturday night. I think we can start using the term Sudden Typhoon, or Sudden Hurricane, for storms intensifying fast in hot ocean waters as they become more common, just like cloudbursts and sudden floods are now common all over the planet, as Earth continues to heat out of control.]

Fina Cat 3 Cyclone brushed southern tip of Tiwi Islands; closed Darwin Airport. ABC Sunday night news Australia report w transcript, Heating Planet

Severe Tropical Cyclone Fina has passed Darwin and the Tiwi Islands at category three strength, with the weather system's gale-force winds leaving a path of destruction as it continues west into the ocean. Fina was the Northern Territory's strongest cyclone to pass Darwin since the deadly Cyclone Tracy in 1974. WATCH & READ- Severe Tropical Cyclone Fina leaves a path of destruction in her wake- ABC NEWS Nov 23 report, transcript below, more reports on Fina to come here soon-[ABC News, an Australian public broadcast service]

TRANSCRIPT

***

After a week of anticipation, cyclone FINA arrived in Darwin last night, causing wild and wet conditions across the city. Relief this morning (Monday) with no injuries reported, although thousands of people are without power potentially for days to come. [footage] Oh no. Oh my god.

Fina's force, was a small but destructive system making its mark in the territory capital. Winds reaching almost 100 kilometers per hour at Darwin airport between 7 and 8:30 last night. [footage] 

We just heard this huge crash and we came outside and found uh the tree had fall on the neighbors veranda on their place. I was sitting on the couch. I was about to doze off and then we just hear a massive thud. We look out the window and there's just a massive tree in the yard. 

As Fina continued its southwest track, it brushed the southern tip of the Tiwi Islands. Melville Island copying it. Waramianga on Ba'ath Island hit even harder with 90 people sheltering inside a school hall. It was a very intense storm. Um and we definitely even during it pretty early on actually we had a lot of trees go which made people quite worried. 

FINA causing no injuries. Although Royal Darwin Hospital's level one ceiling was a casualty, there were no injuries to staff or patients and it did not impact patient outcomes or our ability to look after the people in our care in hospital. 

1.35

Almost 20,000 properties were left without power across Darwin with many suburbs still in the dark tonight. After Cyclone Marcus in 2018, some homes were without power for more than a week. The chief minister today saying once again it could be days before power returns. 

Priority areas for us returning power are of course schools but because we want our kids back in the classroom tomorrow where it's safe to do so. The chief also saying schools should have notified parents by now about reopening. Jack Hisop, ABC News. ABC reporter Olivana Lathouris on trying to get a sense of when things will return to normal. We'll take you now to Olivan Lurus who's been out and about trying to get a sense of when things will return to normal. Ollie, what have you learned? 

2.19

Well, Kyle, I've got some good news for the kiddies out there, maybe some less good news for some parents on the school front. The Department of Education has confirmed a list of at least 17 schools across the greater Darwin area that will be closed tomorrow. Now, schools should have been in touch with parents to let them know whether the school their child attends will be open or closed. We know that around 2,500 power and water customers were reconnected over the course of the day, but that still leaves at least 15,000 households and businesses without power tonight. Now, there's still a lot of traffic lights out of order, debris, trees on the road. We have seen a couple of people coming for an evening stroll through the city, picking up a bit of takeaway. So there is a sense that things are returning somewhat back to normal, but Kyle, I think it's going to be a little bit of a rocky start to the week. 

3.10

Thanks, Ollie. Despite the massive clean-up ahead for Darwin, the city's resilience has shone through as locals pick up the pieces ready to move on. Despite the massive cleanup ahead for Darwin, the city's resilience has shone through as locals pick up the pieces, ready to move on. Trees and traffic lights down, boats stranded, and chainsaws firing up. Just be safe and don't panic. Darwin wakes to the damage bill left by tropical cyclone FINA. Just got here and having a look around and obviously we took a bit of a hit. Same as Darwin everywhere. 

Darwin Harbor to numerous smashed and sunken boats. True Territorian valet parking I suppose. E. And damage to Stokes Hill Wharf. This Territorian lucky to find his vessel still afloat. Seems to be the only bay that's survived. Everything else seems to be on the rocks here. some still opting to open shop and get on with business. We do things a bit different in Darwin. I still, you know, even though it was a category 4 and the trees were uprooted and, you know, bending over and all the rest of it, it was just, you know, something of a bit of a big blow. For some of the thousands left without Maine's power, generators provide for the essentials. So we could run the lights and fans, fridge and freezer, and of course the cricket yesterday on the TV priority. 

After 25 years in Darwin, this northern suburbs family was prepared for Fina's onslaught, but still shocked by her force. Yeah, it was very loud. I was surprised the noise. Like you got rain noise, but the wind. Travelers delayed, waiting outside a closed Darwin airport this morning. I was meant to fly out yesterday morning, which was obviously not happening. With the doors reopening just after midday, we're very fortunate that most of the damage was like everybody else. Trees are down and and some minor damage. Um the runways held up extremely well, but in Fina's wake, travel delays are still expected. Pretty disruptive day. Um but yeah, we're we're underway. Darwin now out of the danger zone as FINA marches on. Matt Garrick, ABC News.

5.20 END OF TRANSCRIPT

[Video continues with more news of power outages and trees down footage to the end. Another, more in-depth report on Fina in Australia November 23rd is coming up shortly that calls it a Category 4 -ke]


Disaster Art film- "TYPHOON 2025 Mega Storm Unleashed" 14-min AI enhanced creation in new Future Reality genre, watch at Heating Planet blog

Released Nov 23, TYPHOON 2025 evokes memories of storms unleashed on Earth this year. 50m waves smash cities and millions are trapped underwater. Video captures the terrifying moment the TYPHOON makes landfall, with catastrophic winds, deadly storm surges, and destruction. Using exclusive footage, satellite visuals, and expert analysis, film shows TYPHOON growing into a mega storm capable of wiping out coastlines in minutes. WATCH: TYPHOON 2025, Mega Storm Unleashed, from Super Tsunami channel at Heating Planet blog[Super Tsunami! channel- dive deep into the world’s most powerful forces of nature, where science meets imagination. From United States since Mar 1, 2025, 11K subscribers,52 videos]
[KE: Another AI enhanced 21st century expressionist sort-of sci-fi film, using recent climate catastrophe footage to create an emotional motion picture experience]

Saturday, November 22, 2025

James Hansen Nov 21 keynote speech: "Today, global warming is accelerating; we are on track for shutdown" ATLAS25 Finland video w transcript, Heating Planet blog

Where is the point of no return? In his keynote at ATLAS25 this week, in video below, James Hansen warns of the dangerous feedback loops of Earth Systems Tipping Points (ESTP), a controversial talking point in the science community. Hansen's message is clear: We're running out of time. WATCH & READ: Dr. James E. Hansen- The truth about global warming, ATLAS25, transcript & more below- Operaatio Arktis Päivitämme yhteiskuntien ilmastostrategiat 2020-luvulle/ We are updating our societies' climate strategies for the 2020s. On YouTube since Apr 2022***TRANSCRIPT:

Next up, we have a speaker who really needs no introduction. For over four decades, he's been one of the most courageous voices in climate science, the scientist who first brought global warming into the world's attention when he testified before the US Congress in 1988. He's the former director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies and current director of the climate science awareness and solutions program in at Colombia University. 

His groundbreaking research on climate sensitivity and radiative forcing has really shaped our fundamental understanding of the earth's climate system. We had the extraordinary opportunity to collaborate with him on his latest paper on the acceleration of global warming and that's work that directly speaks to why we're all here today. So please welcome to the stage Dr. James Hansen.

1.00

I'm glad to have the chance to speak with you. I'm quite impressed that Finland is very pragmatic and I hope that can provide some leadership to some other countries which are not being so pragmatic. So I'll go to my second chart. 

when I testified to the United States Senate in 1988 that I had a high degree of confidence that the world had entered a period of long-term warming spurred by human-made gases, there was near universal condemnation by the scientific community, as described in an article in Science titled Hansen versus the world.

But my conclusion was not based on statistics of the global temperature curve. Other information included the paleoclimate response to Earth orbital variations. the cooling that occurred after Mount Aegong exploded in s and knowledge of greenhouse gas forcings and so on a wide range of information. 

2.27

Today, global warming is accelerating by increasing greenhouse gases plus reduced particulate air pollution, especially from East Asia and ships at sea. We do not need to wait 10 years to conclude that we have reached 1.5 degrees global warming. Satellite data show that Earth is strongly out of energy balance. More energy coming in than going out. So Earth will be getting still warmer. 

An important factor is that IPCC's the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, best estimate of climate sensitivity is a substantial underestimate. I will show that tomorrow in several independent ways. 

Climate sensitivity is probably between four and 5° C for doubled CO2 rather than 3 °. The upshot is that humanity has a larger price to pay than expected. That's a big problem. Technically it's solvable if humanity has its wits about the matter. 

So I was glad to meet the young people who want to have a voice in their future and that's why I came to this meeting. 

4.07

Scientific reticence is dangerous in a problem that has delayed response. Reticence described by Fineman embarrassed physicists, but it didn't harm anybody. What we witness now is scientific reticence on steroids. Perhaps because IPCC was granted the position of supreme authority. 

But in science, supreme authority is not granted to anyone. Galileo proved that. 

An example of expert herd mentality is the response to our global warming acceleration paper which Annie was co-author on. The next day, these experts unanimously condemned our paper in the media. Not one of them discussed the physics in our paper or explained what was wrong. Instead, there were ad homonym remarks. Hansen makes lots of mistakes. Hansen exaggerates. Hansen is not collegial. What could the media do? They dropped the paper. No more discussion of it. 

Juel Charnie, Francis Bretherton would be shocked by this non-science nonsense. Why does this matter? The Secretary General, the United Nations, the body advised by the IPCC keeps saying we can keep global warming to 1.5C via net zero emissions by 2050. 

6.30

What hogwash. You will not see this figure in an IPCC document. It exposes too much. Greenhouse forcing is still increasing almost half a watt per decade. IPCC once defined a scenario RCP 2.6 that would keep global warming near 2 degrees C. The real world is closer to RCP 8.5. Direct air capture of CO2 to close that gap would cost trillions of dollars per year. It's not going to happen. Global warming will exceed 2°. 

Now, for some crucial physics, tipping points have become mighty popular, but be careful in talking about them. Many are just reversible amplifying feedbacks. If we take action to make Earth's energy balance negative, they reverse and amplify cooling. 

The danger is a tipping point that can accelerate and pass a point of no return with consequences that cannot be reversed on any time scale that people care about. 

A prime example is shutdown of North Atlantic deep water formation, which I will discuss tomorrow and we're going to hear from the world's expert on it in a few minutes Stefan Ramsttorm. 

8.18

I will argue that we are on track for shutdown within a few decades and in turn this will accelerate melting of Antarctic ice shelves and large sea level rise. That figure is in a paper we submitted in 2015 and published in 2016. Our science analysis was based on our use of all sources: paleoclimate, climate models, and modern data. 

One reviewer, an IPCC lead author, was determined that the paper never be published, while the other reviewer described the paper as a master work of scholarly synthesis, modeling, virtuosity, and insight with profound implications. So two added reviewers were needed who approved the paper. 

But the story of how the editorial board forced us to change the title “two degrees is highly dangerous” to “could be dangerous” should stand your hair on end. And I'm going to tell that story tomorrow. 

Understanding future climate requires a broad scientific approach including energy science. To halt global warming we must reduce carbon intensity to near zero by mid century. But in half a century we have reduced it only from point 8 to 7. Data show that Sweden and France got halfway there with nuclear power, but the world neglected the chance to develop more capable nuclear to complement renewables. 

Why did IPCC stand by when Germany insisted that nuclear be disallowed as a clean development mechanism? What good are advisors who do not advise? 

10.32

We know that fossil fuel emissions, we know where they're coming from. China is now the largest source. China, the US, and India produce half of global emissions. But global warming is well approximated by cumulative historical emissions. So the US is the greatest cause of global warming. On a per capita basis, the responsibility of the west is even greater. 

But emerging economies and developing nations will have a bigger role in the future. So nations must cooperate. We all live on the same planet and face the same future. 

The entire climate story, the actions needed to achieve a stable climate are subject to scientific inquiry. As scientists, we should not sherk from investigating issues and offering conclusions and opinions for consideration by the public. I hope we have time tomorrow for some discussion of some of the fundamental issues even though the conference may be a little more narrowly focused but we're running out of time. Thanks. [Applause] All From

***
Hansen is an American climate scientist and former director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies. In 2006, Hansen was named one of Time magazine's 100 most influential people. Now Hansen works as Director of Climate Science in Columbia University.
***
[KE: In 2015 I saw we've passed the tipping points, and I moved, from the Mojave Desert to the Lake Tahoe area, California side. At 6K feet up, I can open my windows and let the fresh air in, there's a lake about a mile deep nearby. I think the way to survive the coming crisis is to move; in fact, the Department of Defense decades ago predicted that mass migration would result from global warming and considered it a future Security crisis. Now we have Trump.]

Fina 2- Starting midday Saturday, cyclone winds intensified to hazardous in Darwin Australia- 10 PM Nov 22 Disaster Today video report w transcript , Heating Planet blog

On November 22, 2025, Tropical Cyclone Fina intensified as it moved across the Timor Sea and passed just north of Darwin, Australia, bringing wind gusts and 100–200 mm of rain to the coastal areas of the Northern Territory. Extremely destructive winds recorded on Melville and Bathurst Islands, major road disruptions, and emergency crews were able to respond only in safely accessible locations. WATCH & READ Tropical Cyclone Fina Hits Australia Today! Strong Winds,Heavy Rain and Damage in Darwin! Transcript below part one is here
[Disaster  Today tracks natural disasters from around the world with real-time footage and in-depth analysis! from Ukraine since Mar 21, 2025l 
***
TRANSCRIPT

0.07

On Saturday, November 22 2025, tropical cyclone FINA, which formed over the Timor Sea on November 19th and quickly intensified to category 3 strength, brought destructive winds reaching 205 km hour and storm force downpours to the Tiwi Islands and the Northern Territory coastline as it passed just north of Darwin, leaving the region facing rapidly deteriorating weather conditions from the early morning hours. 

The latest bulletins issued on Saturday afternoon indicated that the system was located approximately 34 to 60 km north of Darwin and Wuramianga about 30 to 40 km south, moving wests southwest at 7 to 8 kmh with sustained wind speeds near the center measured at 130 to 150 kmh and gusts reaching 195 to 205 km hour. The same statements emphasized that winds in Darwin had already reached storm force with this intensity expected to increase in the coming hours and that severe storms had already begun to be felt in the Tiwi Islands. 

1.20

Starting at midday in Darwin, as the winds gradually intensified, the effects began to be seen in concrete terms throughout the city. It was reported that trees had fallen across roads in many places, bringing traffic to a standstill on certain arteries and that crews were only able to respond to areas that could be reached safely. 

As the winds intensified, upper floor balconies, tree lines, and roadside signs, and lightweight structures became hazardous. Therefore, authorities warned citizens to stay away from windows, remain indoors if possible, and avoid going outside. It was announced that wind speeds were felt even more strongly, particularly for residents of coastal suburbs such as Cashirina, Nightcliffe, and Fanny Bay, and that the wave effect created additional risk along the coastline. 

The electrical infrastructure also felt the storm's effects early on. Power outages were confirmed in Darwin, Palmerston, surrounding rural settlements, and many suburbs on the Tiwi Islands with some areas experiencing widespread outages. As power outages limited both lighting and communication capabilities in the evening hours, emergency management units reminded residents to keep essential equipment such as flashlights, spare batteries, and radios on hand. 

3,00

The Tiwi Islands were among the areas that experienced the full force of Fina during the day. On the southern coast of Melville Island, extremely destructive wind gusts of up to 205 km hour were recorded. In these areas, the wind reached a level strong enough to break tree trunks and blow away light structures. Throughout the day, warnings were repeatedly issued for communities along this wind corridor stretching as far as Baurst Island, particularly Wurumianga, Piran Gimpy, and Milicapati, urging them to complete their preparations. 

The rainfall picture also worsened. Heavy cloud bands associated with Fina dropped between 100 and 200 millimeters of rain over a large part of northern Australia during the day. According to bomb measurements, rainfall became persistent, particularly in the Tiwi Islands and areas facing Darwin's northern coast. Current projections suggest that total rainfall could reach 300 mm in some parts of Darwin by Monday night, November 24th. 

This amount significantly increases the risk of flash flooding, particularly in urban areas with poor drainage and around canal and river beds. The risk of flash flooding is not limited to Darwin City alone. Warnings directly cover the mainland coastline between the Tiwi Islands and Point Stewart and Dundee Beach. 

4.30

Heavy rainfall is expected in a short period of time during the passage of cyclone bands in the river valleys and low-lying settlements along this line. According to the Byam assessment, the heaviest rainfall areas are likely to shift southwest towards the Daly river mouth from Saturday night to Sunday. In such a scenario, it is important to closely monitor and early warning systems for riverside campsites, low-lying farmland, and small settlements near the coast. 

FINA's meteorological development is outside the normal pattern for the season. After emerging as a tropical system over the Timor Sea on November 19th, the cyclone intensified to severe tropical cyclone status in just a few days, marking the earliest start to a cyclone season recorded in Australia in 12 years. 

5.28

On Saturday morning, the system reached category 3 over Van Demon Gulf, passed south of Melville Island, re-entered the Gulf, and approached its closest position to Darwin by the afternoon. During this process, radar and satellite data showed Fina to be a relatively compact but extremely intense system. That is, although its area of influence was geographically limited, wind and rainfall intensity reached very high values in the core region. 

The scene created by tropical cyclone Fina around Darwin and the Tiwi Islands serves as an early reminder of the cyclone cycle that communities in northern Australia are accustomed to. This powerful system arriving early in the season once again highlights the importance of early warning and preparedness processes for authorities while demonstrating that the measures taken and information shared will be crucial in ensuring individuals safety during the peak hours of wind and rain. 

6.35 END Of TRANSCRIPT

Fina 1 is here https://cityofangels25.blogspot.com/2025/11/fina-1-sat-11pm-cyclone-graxes.html

[KE: Everything climate scientists predicted about global warming/ climate change  since the 1970s is coming true, only faster]

Fina 1 Sat 11PM report- Cyclone grazes Australia, Tiwi to Top End, 205 km/h winds, stunning footage- MD7 Nov 22 video w transcript, Heating Planet blog

Cyclone Fina brought destructive winds; trees fell, a hospital roof blew apart; people across Tiwi Islands and Top End warned to find shelter now; declared a category 3 system before reaching Darwin early on Saturday morning with wind and rain throughout the day. WATCH & READ Chaos in Australia today! Wind gusts of 205 km/h, hundreds of trees downed!  transcript below. Posted 11 PM Sat Darwin time: [MD7 from Indonesia since 2021][A second report on Fina is Next Post at Heating Planet blog]

TRANSCRIPT

0.00

Cyclone Fina in Australia, November 22, 2025 [footage]

1.00

Cyclone Fina has brought destructive gusts of up to 205 km/h across the Top End with trees felled while part of the hospital roof has collapsed. The Bureau of Meteorology has warned people across the Tiwi Islands and Top End to find shelter now with winds of up to 205 km/h possible as Cyclone Fina nears. The Tropical Cyclone was declared a category 3 system before reaching Darwin early on Saturday morning with strong winds and heavy rains felt throughout the day. [footage]

As a severe Category 3 cyclone, TC Fina is forecast to have sustained winds of 130 m/hr with possible wind gusts up to 195 km/hr. The Tiwi Islands are being hit with very destructive wind of up to 205 km/h with Darwin expected to feel the brunt of Tropical Cyclone Fina into the evening. 

People have been warned to enact their action plans and either bunker at home or take advantage of a community shelter. As at 10:30 pm Saturday, the very destructive core of severe Tropical Cyclone Fina is passing to the northwest of Darwin. [footage]

2.56

The system, which has sustained winds near the centre of 130 km/hr with wind gusts to 185 km/hr, a reduction on the205 km/hr winds earlier during Saturday, is moving west southwest at  8 kilometres per hour. In its latest update, the Bureau of Meteorology says the Darwin radar and satellite imagery shows Fina to the northwest of the city as a small but intense system and after passing Darwin, it will likely maintain its severe intensity Sunday into Monday as it moves through the southern Timor Sea before weakening. [footage]

3.55

The south coast of Melville and Bathurst islands continue to bear the brunt of the system, with very destructive winds to 185 km/h occurring in the area and potentially reaching Wurrumiyanga over the next few hours. Over on the Tiwi Islands, Tiwi College at Pickataramoor, reported the grounds were looking a “bit sad” but still relatively unscathed after Fina’s visit. Photos posted online showed a few trees, outdoor fans and a portaloo, posted with the comment “The poor old outdoor dunny ain’t so funny”, being upended and relocated while a shade cloth was barely hanging on by a thread. 

Staff and students were reported as safe and sound. “Tiwi College is looking a bit sad and sorry for itself after Fina came to visit us today but we forgive her,” college staff posted online. [footage]

5.14

Smith Street, in Darwin’s CBD, will be blocked to traffic when Tropical Cyclone Fina passes after a giant tree fell on the road. The tree fell just after 9 pm as Nhulunbuy resident Brett Patching stood with friends on Smith Street as the cyclone raged around them. Brett returned to Darwin from Bali on Friday morning to be told his connecting flight to Nhulunbuy had been cancelled. He’s now staying at Darwin Central Hotel on Smith Street waiting for the storm to pass so he can return home, but took this video moments after the tree came down, damaging pipes and infrastructure. [footage]

6.13

Cyclone Fina has inched past Darwin, but emergency warnings remain in place as gale-force winds may still increase over the next few hours. At 9.30 pm the Cat 3 cyclone was 50 km northwest of Darwin and 40 km south southwest of Wurrumiyanga, tracking west southwest. Sustained winds near the centre of the cyclone are at speeds of 130 km/h, with wind gusts up to 185  km/h. The strongest wind gust recorded in Darwin was 107 km/h at the airport shortly after 8 pm. [footage]

7.15

Territorians have been warned to shelter in place until further notice as the worst of Tropical Cyclone Fina grazes past Darwin. Incident Controller Superintendent Emma Carter said Territorians should stay where they’re bunkered down until given the all clear by emergency crews, most likely to come on Sunday morning. “We are aware of trees being down so when we do give the all clear to leave shelters please take extra care when moving around,” she said. “When it’s safe we will issue an advisory to let everyone know, but we ask you refrain from sightseeing. [footage] 

8.12

Roofing at the Royal Darwin Hospital has partially collapsed with reports there is water in the building. It was originally believed that the theatre, intensive care unit and pharmacy have all been impacted by the roof collapse, but the Department of Health has denied those claims. There are also reports that the air-conditioning has been impacted while the fire alarm has been triggered.

Chief Minister Lia Finocchiaro said emergency services and volunteers will be out helping people and clearing roads as soon as Tropical Cyclone Fina has passed. [footage] 

9.10

The Chief praised the Territory’s response to the catastrophic system as questions start to turn to what comes next. The Category 3 Cyclone barrelled between the Tiwi Islands and Darwin’s north coast carrying 205 km/h wind gusts at its height while felling trees across the region. In spite of the perilous system the chief was able to congratulate crews for their coordination and preparedness throughout the week leading up to the devastating storm.

[KE: Everything climate scientists predicted about global warming/ climate change  since the 1970s is coming true, only faster]