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Weather events in Taiwan (1 C, 1 P) Pages in category "Climate of Taiwan" ... This page was last edited on 24 November 2022, at 07:29 (UTC).
Pages in category "Weather events in Taiwan" This category contains only the following page. ... This page was last edited on 24 November 2022, at 01:09 (UTC).
In July 2023, Typhoon Doksuri drifted to Southern Taiwan, raising warnings in various places. [21] 278,000 homes later lost power, [22] with one woman dying in Taiwan. [23] In August, Typhoon Haikui directly hit Taiwan, with 8,000 people evacuating. [24] 217,000 houses lost electricity with the typhoon, with multiple floods, and rainfall. [25]
As Koinu made landfall, it brought record-breaking winds and rains. A weather station on Orchid Island recorded gusts of winds of 198.7 kilometres per hour (123.5 mph) at 9:40 p.m. and gusts of 342.7 kilometres per hour (212.9 mph) 13 minutes later, both representing record-highs since record-keeping began in 1897. [8]
By November 13, the JTWC noted that the system had dissipated due to strong wind shear as it was heading towards the equator. [209] The JMA however, kept monitoring the depression around that time. [210] On November 17, the JMA finally stopped monitoring the system as a tropical depression at 06:00 UTC, [211] labeling it as a low-pressure area ...
While Taiwan was under Japanese rule, the government set up five weather monitoring stations on the island, located in Taipei, Taichung, Tainan, Hengchun, and Penghu.On 19 December 1897, the Taipei Observatory moved to the location presently occupied by the Central Weather Administration.
The 2024 Pacific typhoon season was an event in the annual cycle of tropical cyclone formation in the western Pacific Ocean.It is the fifth-latest starting Pacific typhoon season on record, the first season since 2019 to be average in terms of named storms typhoons and super typhoons as well as the deadliest since 2013, and the fourth-costliest Pacific typhoon season on record, mostly due to Yagi.
The first of the two tropical storms was predicted to pass near Upper Thailand in either August or September, while the other one was expected to move to the south of Southern Thailand during November. [11] On June 30, Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau predicted that 28–32 tropical storms would develop over the basin, while two — four systems ...