Tropical Depression 22W organized rapidly on Monday and intensified into Tropical Storm Hagupit. At 10:00 p.m. EST on Monday the center of Tropical Storm Hagupit was located at latitude 6.1°N and longitude 146.0°E which put it about 490 miles south-southeast of Guam and about 570 miles east-southeast of Yap. Hagupit was moving toward the west at 24 m.p.h. The maximum sustained wind speed was 65 m.p.h. and there were gusts to 80 m.p.h.
Hagupit has developed multiple spiral bands of thunderstorms and there are some indications that an eye may be forming at the center of the circulation. There is a large and well developed circulation around the tropical storm. The winds in the upper levels are relatively light and upper level divergence continues to pump out mass from the center of circulation. Hagupit will continue to move over warm Sea Surface Temperatures and the environment is favorable for continued intensification. Hagupit could become a typhoon on Tuesday and it could be a strong typhoon in several days.
A subtropical ridge north of Hagupit is steering the storm toward the west and it is likely to steer the tropical storm in a general west-northwesterly direction during the next 48-72 hours. The projected path would bring Hagupit very close to Yap in about 36 hours. There is more uncertainty about the possible track of Hagupit after it passes Yap because an upper level trough moving north of the storm could weaken the subtropical ridge. If the ridge weakens, the winds at the steering level could become weaken and the motion of Hagupit could slow.