Guam on alert as Super Typhoon Bavi closes in
Howling winds and lashing rains battered Guam and the Northern Marianas late Sunday hours before the projected arrival of a "super typhoon" with equivalent force to a category-5 hurricane over the US
Howling winds and lashing rains battered Guam and the Northern Marianas late Sunday hours before the projected arrival of a "super typhoon" with equiv
Read Full Story at France 24 →Why This Matters
The impending arrival of Super Typhoon Bavi underscores the Pacific’s vulnerability to extreme weather, particularly in U.S. territories where infrastructure and emergency response systems may be less resilient than in mainland states. For Guam—a strategic military hub and home to thousands of civilians—the storm’s intensity and timing raise urgent questions about preparedness and long-term climate resilience in the region.
Background Context
Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands lie in the Pacific’s typhoon belt, a region where storms intensify rapidly due to warming ocean temperatures, a trend linked to climate change. The U.S. territories lack the same federal disaster funding mechanisms as states, complicating recovery efforts, while their military significance has historically drawn more attention to defense infrastructure than civilian safety measures.
What Happens Next
If Bavi makes landfall as a super typhoon, Guam could face catastrophic wind damage, storm surges, and prolonged power outages, testing its emergency response networks and supply chains. The storm’s trajectory may also disrupt critical U.S. military operations in the Pacific, where Andersen Air Force Base and Naval Base Guam serve as key strategic assets. Observers will closely monitor whether the territory’s evacuation protocols and infrastructure hold under the storm’s full force.
Bigger Picture
Super Typhoon Bavi is the latest in a pattern of increasingly severe tropical cyclones in the Pacific, a phenomenon scientists attribute to rising sea surface temperatures tied to global warming. The storm’s approach highlights the growing intersection of climate vulnerability and geopolitical stakes in the Pacific, where U.S. interests compete with those of China and other regional powers amid escalating climate-related risks.


