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The origins of Severe Tropical Storm Trami can be traced back to October 19, when the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) reported a low-pressure area located 633 km (394 mi) west of Guam. [1] The United States Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) described it as a very weak vortex with light winds wrapping around the circulation, along with deep ...
People clean up after Trami caused floods in Polangui, Philippines, on 23 October 2024 (AP) Torrential rains brought by tropical storm Trami triggered widespread flooding in eastern Philippines ...
Trami, locally known as Kristine, lashed the country’s northeast on Wednesday and left many regions submerged. ... The Philippines faces about 20 tropical storms every year. The storms often ...
Forecasters raised the rare possibility that the storm could make a U-turn next week. Tropical Storm Trami Leaves at Least 82 Dead in Philippines Skip to main content
Trami continued crossing the South China Sea, maintaining severe tropical storm strength. Trami later encountered strong easterly vertical wind shear as it approached the coast of Vietnam. The storm later made another landfall in Da Nang at 10 AM local time on October 27. Trami then moved southwestwards due to weak steering flow before making a ...
On June 28, Tropical Storm Beryl formed at 43.6° W, being the second-easternmost cyclone on record in the tropical Atlantic, behind only Tropical Storm Bret in 2023. [16] The next day, Beryl intensified into a hurricane at 49.3° W , [ 17 ] becoming the easternmost June hurricane in the tropical Atlantic on record, ahead of the 1933 Trinidad ...
Typhoon Haishen (2020) (T2010, 11W, Kristine) – a Category 4 super typhoon that moved through Japan and the Korean Peninsula. Severe Tropical Storm Trami (2024) (T2420, 22W, Kristine) – A deadly and destructive tropical storm that drenched the Philippine area. The name Kristine was retired from
The Philippines is a typhoon-prone country, with approximately twenty tropical cyclones entering its area of responsibility per year. Locally known generally as bagyo (), [3] typhoons regularly form in the Philippine Sea and less often, in the South China Sea, with the months of June to September being the most active, August being the month with the most activity.