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The storm moved through the country and dissipated on 5 May. [8] 13 May 1902 – A cyclonic storm struck the coast in the vicinity of Karachi. [9] 21 June 1906 – After moving across India, a storm crossed into Pakistan. [10] June 1907 – A tropical storm struck the coast near Karachi. [4] 3 September 1926 – A storm moved from Gujarat into ...
Cyclonic Storm Asna [a] (/ ˈ ɑː s n ɑː /) was a tropical cyclone that affected Gujarat, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh states of India and southern Pakistan from 25 August to 2 September 2024. It formed as deep depression over land, intensified in the cyclone and moved into Arabian Sea .
Cyclonic Storm Gulab (/ ɡ uː ˈ l ə b /) and Severe Cyclonic Storm Shaheen (/ ʃ ə ˈ h iː n /) were two tropical cyclones that caused considerable damage to South and West Asia during the 2021 North Indian Ocean cyclone season. Gulab impacted India and Pakistan, [1] [2] while Shaheen impacted Iran, Oman and the United Arab Emirates.
National Disaster Management Authority (Pakistan) List of extreme weather records in Pakistan; List of tropical cyclones in Pakistan; List of earthquakes in Pakistan; Climate change in Pakistan; List of floods in Pakistan; Drought in Pakistan
Floods in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa killed eight people in January, [2] however from June 2022, floods affected most of Pakistan, affecting around 33 million people, or 12% of the country's population. [3] Over two million houses were damaged or destroyed by flooding, [ 4 ] and over $40 billion USD worth of damage has been caused.
This is a table of all storms in the 2024 North Indian Ocean cyclone season. It mentions all of the season's storms and their names, duration, peak intensities according to the IMD storm scale, damage, and death totals. Damage and death totals include the damage and deaths caused when that storm was a precursor wave or extratropical low.
However, the IMD reassessed the second system to have reached cyclonic storm strength, and retroactively named it Yemyin. [1] Throughout three countries, 983 people were killed: 730 in Pakistan, 140 in India, and 113 in Afghanistan. In all, the storms wrought roughly $2.1 billion in damage in India and Pakistan. [2]
Cyclone Biparjoy, at peak intensity while approaching the India-Pakistan border region on June 12, 2023. Behind super cyclonic storms, extremely severe cyclonic storms are the second-highest classification on the India Meteorological Department (IMD)'s intensity scale. There have been 32 of them since reliable records began in 1960.