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Part of the 2011 Pacific typhoon season Severe Tropical Storm Nock-ten , known in the Philippines as Severe Tropical Storm Juaning , was a strong tropical storm which made a total of four landfalls in Southeast Asia , killing more than 100 people and causing damage estimated at US$126 million.
Typhoon Ma-on enters the Philippine area of responsibility in a short matter of time as it is being named Ineng. July 20. Typhoon Ma-on steadily weakens as it made landfall in Wakayama. July 23. Tropical Storm Ma-on weakens to a tropical depression and dissipates the next day.
July 30, 2011 — Tropical Storm Nock-ten (Bão số 3) affected north-central Vietnam with 6,200 acres of rice and other crop fields were reported to be completely submerged due to flooding. 20 people have died from the storm. September 26, 2011 — Tropical Storm Haitang (Bão số 4) affected the central provinces of Vietnam, killing 25 people.
The 2011 Pacific typhoon season was a below average season that produced a total of 21 named storms, 8 typhoons, ... As it made landfall over Hanoi, Vietnam, ...
During 2011, tropical cyclones formed within seven different tropical cyclone basins, located within various parts of the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans. During the year, a total of 131 tropical cyclones had formed this year to date. 71 tropical cyclones had been named by either a Regional Specialized Meteorological Center (RSMC) or a ...
Ahead of the storm, officials were preparing to evacuate 1.3 million residents along the coast of central Vietnam, according to Reuters. Typhoon Molave slams Vietnam with damaging winds, heavy ...
Vietnam is preparing for more flooding with a tropical depression forecast to strengthen into a storm as it heads to its central coast, days after typhoon Yagi set off floods and landslides that ...
The 2011 typhoon season in Philippines overlapped the monsoon season in Indochina, and the country was hit by a series of storms over the course of 4 months: Typhoon Nesat in September, which was followed shortly after by Typhoon Nalgae, and then in December by Tropical Storm Washi, which hit on an unusual track, timing and location.