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Large waterspout sighted off East Coast Park

This article is more than 12 months old

A waterspout extending to the clouds was seen off Singapore’s shores on Sunday (June 18) morning.

Mr Kiran Grewal told The Straits Times that he spotted it at about 9am, just before a morning storm began.

His photos, taken from Boon Keng, show an ominous bank of clouds, with the water spout extending from it to the sea.

“Looks like the funnel is just off the shores of Batam,” he added.

The weather phenomenon could be observed from as far away as Sengkang, according to another ST reader who took photos of it from Anchorvale Road.

According to the National Environment Agency (NEA), waterspouts are short-lived weather phenomenon occasionally seen in the coastal waters of Singapore.

They typically form beneath cumulus or cumulonimbus clouds over warm coastal waters just before showers begin.

The “funnel” is formed by water droplets in a rotating vortex of air, according to the NEA website.

While they are not as powerful and destructive as tornadoes, water spouts can pose a danger to small boats in the vicinity but will weaken and dissipate as they near the shore.

They usually come with storms, so lightning and strong winds can be expected. An average of three waterspouts a year have been reported yearly.

The Straits Times last reported a sighting in August last year, but reports of water spouts have appeared in local newspapers as far back as 1908.

- THE STRAITS TIMES

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