- Title
- 2010 Tropical Cyclone Bandu Path
- License
- Not Specified
-
+ The original author did not specify a license.
- Abstract
This layer shows the path followed by Tropical Cyclone Bandu. Early on Saturday, 22 May 2010, Tropical Storm 02A moved into the Gulf of Aden and was named "Bandu." At that time, Bandu had maximum sustained winds near 45 knots (52 mph) and was 50 miles north-northwest of Cape Guardafui, Somalia. The storm hit Bari Region in northern Somalia, resulting in flooding and displacement of approximately 12,000 people. TC Bandu quickly dissipated because of cooler waters, higher wind shear and drier air in the Gulf of Aden. It curved southwest and made landfall in northeast Somalia
- Publication Date
- April 14, 2022, 11:38 a.m.
- Type
- Vector Data
- Category
- Disaster Risks
- Information used for appropriate actions for future use of the land. Examples: land use maps, zoning maps, cadastral surveys, land ownership.
- Regions
- Africa , Somalia
- Responsible
- IGAD_DRM
- Attribution
- ICPAC
- Maintenance Frequency
- Data Is Updated As Deemed Necessary
- Language
- English
- Temporal Extent
- May 19, 2010, midnight - May 23, 2010, midnight
- Supplemental Information
On May 26, OCHA reported flooding in parts of Belet Weyne town, Hiran Region, due to embankment breaches along the Shabelle River as a result of 2010 TC Bandu, displacing an estimated 17,000 people. According to the FAO Somalia Water and Land Information Management Project (SWALIM), flooding also damaged crops and resulted in the displacement of a combined population of nearly 2,000 people in Jamaame town, Lower Juba Region, as well as Afgooye and Kurtunwaarey districts, Lower Shabelle Region.
- Spatial Representation Type
- vector data is used to represent geographic data
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