Across the country, people huddled in evacuation centres and their homes as Typhoon Hagupit churned towards the disaster-plagued Southeast Asian nation, with the eye of the storm expected to hit this night.
"This is it. I know you are tired, not enough sleep, not enough food, too much coffee," Interior Secretary Mar Roxas said as he called for a final effort to bring more people in vulnerable areas to safe shelters.
Roxas was speaking at a nationally televised planning conference from the eastern island of Samar, which was forecast to be the first hit when Hagupit arrives bringing with it winds of 185 kilometres an hour.
Hagupit is expected to take three days to cut across the Philippines, passing over mostly poor farming central regions, then possibly the southern regions of the densely populated capital of Manila.
The local Pagasa weather agency and the US Navy's Joint Typhoon Warning Center have projected slightly different paths for Hagupit, with the American service predicting it will get closer to Manila.
Haiyan was the strongest storm ever recorded on land, with winds of 315 kilometres an hour.
It also generated tsunami-like storm surges that claimed more than 7,350 lives, making it one of the Philippines' deadliest natural disasters.
In Tacloban, one of the cities worst-hit by Haiyan, thousands of traumatised typhoon survivors crammed into schools, churches and other evacuation centres today.
"We are afraid. People are panicking," Alma Gaut, 36, whose house was destroyed and mother died during Haiyan, told AFP as she huddled in the second floor of a university with more than 1,000 other people.
