Tropical Cyclone Fantala stalled north of Madagascar on Monday and it weakened below Category 5 on the Saffir-Simpson Scale. At 8:00 p.m. EDT on Monday the center of Tropical Cyclone Fantala was located at latitude 9.2°S and longitude 49.6°E which put it about 200 miles (320 km) north of Antsirañana, Madagascar. Fantala was nearly stationary. The maximum sustained wind speed was 140 m.p.h. (220 km/h) and there were wind gusts to 165 m.p.h. (265 km/h). The minimum surface pressure was 933 mb.
The structure of the circulation of Tropical Cyclone Fantala deteriorated on Monday. An eye was no longer visible in satellite imagery and the ring of thunderstorms that was around the eye appeared to have a gap on the east side. There were still bands of thunderstorms spiraling around the outer portion of the circulation. However, it appeared that some drier air may have been pulled into the northeastern part of Fantala. Thunderstorms were still generating upper level divergence, but it was mainly to the south of the tropical cyclone. The upper level divergence pumped out less mass than the amount of mass that converged in the lower levels and the surface pressure rose about 20 mb on Monday.
The environment around Tropical Cyclone Fantala contains a mixture of favorable and unfavorable features. Fantala is over water where the Sea Surface Temperatures are near 29°C. Upper level winds are blowing a little more strongly from the northeast, but the vertical wind shear is still not too significant. Fantala does seem to be pulling in some drier air into its circulation. The tropical cyclone is nearly stationary and its strong winds may be mixing some cooler water to the surface. Drier air and cooler water would reduce the energy available to drive the circulation of Fantala and it is likely to weaken further on Tuesday.
Fantala is in an area where the steering currents are weak and it may not move much during the next 12 to 24 hours. Eventually, a ridge is expected to develop northeast of Fantala and start to steer the tropical cyclone toward the southeast. On its anticipated track the core of strongest winds would pass north of Madagascar. However, there is still uncertainty about the future track of Fantala and it could still have an impact on northern Madagascar.