Philippines braces for ‘severe’ drought after fewest major storms for 25 years in 2023
- So far this year, only 10 major storms have made landfall or come close, the lowest number since 1998. The Philippines is usually hit by around 20
- Government officials now expect 77 per cent of the country’s provinces to be in drought by the end of May, as a consequence of the El Nino phenomenon

So far this year, only 10 have made landfall or come close, the lowest number since 1998 when 11 were recorded, said Ana Solis, chief climatologist at the state weather forecaster, on Tuesday.

With less than three weeks of the year left, “it looks like the record will be beaten”, Solis said, adding that climate change was “probably” a factor.
The Philippines began keeping weather records in 1948, Solis said.
As a consequence of the weather phenomenon known as El Nino, the Philippines was also likely to experience “moderate to severe drought conditions” from February to May 2024, the government’s Science and Technology Department Secretary Renato Solidum told reporters.
That would be comparable to the drought during the 1997-1998 El Nino, which was the country’s worst-ever dry spell.