Tropical Cyclone Fantala intensified further on Saturday and it is almost the equivalent of a Category 5 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Scale. At 8:00 p.m. EDT on Saturday the center of Tropical Cyclone Fantala was located at latitude 11.1°S and longitude 53.4°E which put it about 620 miles north of St. Denis, La Reunion. Fantala was moving toward the west-northwest at 12 m.p.h. (19 km/h). The maximum sustained wind speed was 155 m.p.h. (250 km/h) and there were wind gusts to 190 m.p.h. (305 km/h). The minimum surface pressure was 922 mb.
Tropical Cyclone Fantala increased in both intensity and size again on Saturday. Hurricane force winds now extend out about 60 miles (95 km) south of the center of circulation. The Hurricane Intensity Index (HII) for Fantala is 33.3. The Hurricane Size Index (HSI) is 18.7 and the Hurricane Wind Intensity Size Index (HWISI) is 52.0.
The circulation of Tropical Cyclone Fantala is very well organized. It has a clearly visible eye on satellite imagery. The eye is surrounded by a ring of strong thunderstorms. Additional bands of thunderstorms are rotating around the core of the circulation. The thunderstorms are generating strong upper level divergence which is pumping out mass in all directions.
The environment around Tropical Cyclone Fantala is favorable. It is over water where the Sea Surface Temperature is near 29°C. The upper level winds are weak and there is little vertical wind shear. Tropical Cyclone Fantala could intensify a little more during the next 24 hours. If one of the rainbands wraps around the existing eye, and eyewall replacement cycle could cause fluctuations of intensity.
A subtropical ridge southwest of Fantala is steering the tropical cyclone toward the west-northwest. That general motion is expected to continue for another 24 to 36 hours. In a day or so Fantala will move into an area where the steering currents are weaker and it could slow down or stall. Eventually a northwesterly flow is forecast turn Tropical Cyclone Fantala back toward the southeast. However, guidance from numerical models differs on when and where the southeasterly turn will occur.
On its anticipated track Tropical Cyclone Fantala could be near the northern end of Madagascar in a day or two. The current size and intensity of Fantala means that it could produce regional significant damage if it were to hit land. The future track of Fantala will determine if the tropical cyclone has an impact on Madagascar.