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[1] 2019 fell to the third-warmest year on record when the following year surpassed it. [2] In 2019, Australia and the U.S. state of Alaska recorded their warmest years on record. [1] There is a previous El Niño episode continuing from last year, and new El Niño episode started this year, lasting until 2020. [3] [4]
January 2020 had an average global surface land and water temperature of 55.65 °F (13.14 °C), which was 2.05°F (1.14°C) above the 20th century average. This made January 2020 the warmest January on record, surpassing 2016 by 0.04°F (0.02°C). The month's departure from the average was the fourth highest of any month ever recorded.
February 7, 2019: PAGASA: January–March: 1–2 tropical cyclones [5] February 7, 2019: PAGASA: April–June: 2–4 tropical cyclones [5] July 15, 2019: PAGASA: July–September: 6–9 tropical cyclones [6] July 15, 2019: PAGASA: October–December: 3–5 tropical cyclones [6] 2019 season Forecast Center Tropical cyclones Tropical storms ...
November 8, 2019: Tropical Storm Nakri (Quiel), combined with the effects of a cold front, produced widespread rainfall. Cagayan Province alone suffered ₱1.8 billion (US$35.6 million) in damage. [28] November 19–20, 2019: Typhoon Kalmaegi (Ramon) hits Cagayan and moved southwestward over the Luzon archipelago.
The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Filipino: Pangasiwaan ng Pilipinas sa Serbisyong Atmosperiko, Heopisiko at Astronomiko, [4] abbreviated as PAGASA, which means "hope" as in the Tagalog word pag-asa) is the National Meteorological and Hydrological Services (NMHS) agency of the Philippines mandated to provide protection against natural calamities ...
Typhoon Kammuri, known in the Philippines as Typhoon Tisoy, was a powerful typhoon which impacted the Philippines in early December 2019. Kammuri, which means crown or Corona Borealis in Japanese, the twenty-eighth named storm and sixteenth typhoon of the 2019 Pacific typhoon season, Kammuri developed from a tropical wave situated a couple hundred kilometers south of the Mariana Islands.
The 2020–2023 La Niña event was a rare three-year, triple-dip La Niña. [1] The impact of the event led to numerous natural disasters that were either sparked or fueled by La Niña. La Niña refers to the reduction in the temperature of the ocean surface across the central and eastern equatorial Pacific, accompanied by notable changes in the ...
The 2019–20 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season was a slightly above-average season in tropical cyclone and subtropical cyclone formation west of 90°E.The season officially began on 15 November, however, the formation of the first system—Zone of Disturbed Weather 01—occurred on 22 July 2019, well before the official start of the season.