Dineo downgraded‚ but beware winds of 51-62km/h and heavy rains

16 February 2017 - 11:11 By Roxanne Henderson
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Cyclone Dineo has been downgraded to a tropical depression as she makes her way towards Limpopo and Mpumalanga.

The tropical system reached cyclone status on Wednesday afternoon just before it made landfall in Mozambique‚ near Massinga‚ north of Inhambane‚ but her winds have now significantly weakened.

  • LIVE: We track Tropical Storm Dineo We track the formidable storm system known as Dineo as it heads through Mozambique and prepares to strike parts of South Africa. 

“It's now called ex-Dineo. It's now [been classified as] a tropical depression‚ which means winds have dropped significantly to speeds of about 51-62km/h‚” said South African Weather Service forecaster Wayne Venter.

Cyclones are associated with more destructive winds of over 100km/h.

Ex-Dineo was over central Mozambique on Thursday morning‚ with an outer band of rain moving into Limpopo and Mpumalanga.

“We still have a warning out for heavy rainfall and flooding in areas‚ which are Ehlanzeni District in Mpumalanga and the Mopani and Vhembe districts in Limpopo‚” Venter said.

  • KwaZulu-Natal Sharks Board to remove shark nets as Dineo approachesThe KwaZulu-Natal Sharks Board has begun pulling up its shark nets on smaller provincial beaches as Dineo moves from the Mozambican Channel closer to the South African east coast. 

Parts of Limpopo and Mpumalanga are due to experience rainfall from Thursday evening throughout the night and into Friday morning‚ with up to 100mm expected.

You can see what Dineo looks like with this interactive widget:

 

Dineo was expected to dissipate in the region of Musina and Beit Bridge on Friday and drift towards eastern Botswana by Saturday.

  • Dineo won't stop weekend jaunt‚ says MSC CruisesA planned weekend cruise leaving on Friday from Durban to Portuguese Island off Mozambique is going ahead despite Tropical Storm Dineo. 

Tropical storms and cyclones‚ which originate over open water‚ weaken significantly as they pass over land. This is because they depend on the open ocean as a source of latent heat energy to sustain their growth and intensification.

Municipalities in Ehlanzeni‚ Mopani and Vhembe have their emergency services on stand-by.

 

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