Tropical cyclones in 2017
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Tropical cyclones in 2017 | |
---|---|
Year boundaries | |
First system | 06F |
Formed | January 2, 2017 |
Last system | Ava |
Dissipated | January 9, 2018 |
Strongest system | |
Name | Maria[nb 1] |
Lowest pressure | 908 mbar/hPa; 26.81 inHg |
Longest lasting system | |
Name | 19F & Noru |
Duration | 20 days |
Year statistics | |
Total systems | 146 |
Named systems | 88 |
Total fatalities | 5,645 total |
Total damage | $321.44 billion (2017 USD) |
During 2017, 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 146 tropical cyclones had formed. 88 tropical cyclones had been named by either a Regional Specialized Meteorological Center (RSMC) or a Tropical Cyclone Warning Center (TCWC).
The most active basin in the year was the Western Pacific, which documented 27 named systems. However, the season was a slightly below-average season and the first since 1977 season saw no Category 5-equivalent super typhoon. The Eastern Pacific, despite amounting to 18 named systems, also was a was significantly less active than the previous three Pacific hurricane seasons (2014, 2015 and 2016). However, the North Atlantic hurricane featured 17 named storms, and was the costliest tropical cyclone season on record. It also had the fifth-most named storms since reliable records began in 1851 – tied with 1936 – and the most major hurricanes since 2005. The Australian region season experienced the average number of cyclones reaching tropical storm intensity, numbering 11, respectively. Activity across the southern hemisphere's three basins—South-West Indian, Australian, and South Pacific—was spread evenly, with each region recording seven named storms apiece. Three Category 5 tropical cyclones formed during the year.
The strongest and deadliest tropical cyclone was Hurricane Maria with a minimum barometric pressure of 908 mbar (hPa; 26.81 inHg) and killing 3,000 people in Puerto Rico and Dominica. The costliest tropical cyclone of the year was Hurricane Harvey in the Atlantic, which struck Houston metropolitan area in August causing US$125 billion in damage, tying with Hurricane Katrina as the costliest tropical cyclone worldwide.
Global atmospheric and hydrological conditions[]
For the majority of the year, the tropics were dominated by neutral El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) conditions, before La Niña conditions set in later in the year.[1] As the year opened, sea surface temperatures anomalies across the central and east-central equatorial Pacific were cooler than average, while the impacts of La Niña lingered within the atmospheric circulation, following an abrupt end to the 2016 La Niña episode. Over the next few months, these anomalies warmed and nearly reached the thresholds needed for an El Niño event to be declared, however, they subsequently cooled throughout the rest of the year and the 2017–18 La Niña event was declared to be underway.
Scientists pointed out that the increase of CO2 emissions contributes to warmer ocean waters and more moist air for rain.[2] Because of sea level rise it is assumed that the storm surge of Hurricane Irma and other storms will cause greater flooding to vulnerable areas.[3][2] Data collected by NASA showed that ocean surface temperatures in the path of Irma were above 30 °C (86 °F), capable of sustaining a Category 5 hurricane.[4] Prior to affecting the U.S. mainland, Miami's mayor Tomás Regalado noted on Hurricane Irma, "This is the time to talk about climate change. This is the time that the president and the EPA and whoever makes decisions needs to talk about climate change."[5] A day later the head of the EPA, Scott Pruitt said, "..to discuss the cause and effect of these storms, there's the… place (and time) to do that, it's not now."[6] Following Irma's landfall, Donald Trump was asked about the connection between hurricanes and climate change, and stated that "We’ve had bigger storms than this."[7] Richard Branson who was directly impacted by hurricane Irma noted, "..hurricanes are the start of things to come. Look, climate change is real. Ninety-nine per cent of scientists know it's real. The whole world knows it's real except for maybe one person in the White House."[8]
United Nations secretary general António Guterres citing the devastation from hurricanes noted in September, "The catastrophic Atlantic hurricane season has been made worse by climate change. Cutting carbon emissions must clearly be part of our response to the disaster. The rise in the surface temperature of the ocean has had an impact on weather patterns and we must do everything possible to bring it down."[9]
The Associated Press looked at the yearly average accumulated cyclone energy (ACE), which accounts for wind speed and storm duration to assess hurricane power of the past 30 years and found it to be 41 percent higher than the previous 30 years. They asked several experts about their opinion, James Kossin from NOAA "There's no question that the storms are stronger than they were 30 years ago." Climate scientist Stefan Rahmstorf of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, "The only caveat being that the increase might be exaggerated somewhat because of undercounting early storms." Meteorologist Philip Klotzbach noted, "What's happening with hurricanes — the frequency, the duration, and the energy — is probably a combination of factors caused by both nature and man, a mish-mosh of everything."[10] Kerry Emanuel who studies hurricanes, told the BBC, "The warming of the climate has increased the underlying probabilities of very heavy rain events like happened in Harvey and very high category hurricanes like Irma. It is just not sensible to say either storm was caused by climate change, but the underlying probabilities are going up."[11]
Summary[]
North Atlantic Ocean[]
Eastern & Central Pacific Oceans[]
Western Pacific Ocean[]
North Indian Ocean[]
Systems[]
January[]
In January 2017, 12 storms formed. Tropical 14U, the strongest system this January 2017, affected the Northern Territory and the Western Australia. Surprisingly, 01W (Auring) formed in January 7 on the West Pacific and lasted until the 16th.
Storm name | Dates active | Max wind km/h (mph) |
Pressure (hPa) |
Areas affected | Damage (USD) |
Deaths | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
06F | January 2–6 | Unspecified | 1002 | None | None | None | |
08U | January 3–7 | Unspecified | 994 | Northern Territory, Western Australia | None | None | |
09U | January 3–15 | Unspecified | 1003 | Cocos (Keeling) Islands, Christmas Island | None | None | |
10U | January 7–12 | Unspecified | 1001 | Northern Territory | None | None | |
11U | January 7–8 | Unspecified | 1000 | Queensland | None | None | |
01W (Auring) | January 7–16 | 55 (35) | 1002 | Philippines, Vietnam, Cambodia | $140 thousand | 11 | [12][13] |
07F | January 10–20 | Unspecified | 998 | None | None | None | |
08F | January 10–11 | Unspecified | 1009 | None | None | None | |
12U | January 18–19 | Unspecified | Unspecified | None | None | None | |
13U | January 21–25 | Unspecified | 1009 | None | None | None | |
14U | January 23–31 | 85 (50) | 988 | Northern Territory, Western Australia | None | None | |
03 | January 27–28 | 55 (35) | 1005 | None | None | None |
February[]
In February, 16 systems formed. Cyclone Dineo, one of the deadliest tropical cyclones on record in the South-West Indian Ocean and Southern Hemisphere, hit Mozambique and lasted from 13 February to 17th of the same month. On the West Pacific, Bising formed and lasted from 3rd – 7th of this month.
Storm name | Dates active | Max wind km/h (mph) | Min pressure (mbar) | Areas affected | Damage (USD) | Deaths | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Carlos | February 2–10 | 130 (80) | 965 | None | None | None | |
Bising | February 3–7 | 55 (35) | 1000 | None | None | None | |
09F | February 5–11 | Unspecified | 999 | Fiji | None | None | |
10F | February 7–11 | Unspecified | 993 | Fiji, Vanuatu | None | None | |
15U | February 7–11 | Unspecified | 984 | Western Australia | Unknown | 2 | |
16U | February 9–10 | Unspecified | Unspecified | New Caledonia | None | None | |
11F | February 9–12 | Unspecified | 1002 | Vanuatu, Fiji | None | None | |
17U | February 11–12 | Unspecified | 1004 | Northern Territory | None | None | |
Dineo | February 13–17 | 140 (85) | 955 | Mozambique, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Malawi | $217 million | 280 | [14][15][16] |
12F | February 15–24 | Unspecified | 1002 | Fiji | None | None | |
13F | February 15–18 | Unspecified | 998 | None | None | None | |
14F | February 16–22 | 55 (35) | 997 | Fiji | None | None | |
18U | February 16–22 | Unspecified | Unspecified | None | None | None | |
Alfred | February 16–22 | 85 (50) | 994 | Northern Territory, Queensland | Unknown | Unknown | |
Bart | February 19–22 | 75 (45) | 994 | Southern Cook Islands | None | None | |
16F | February 23–26 | Unspecified | 1005 | None | None | None |
March[]
On March, 11 storms formed. Cyclone Enawo, was the strongest cyclone to strike Madagascar since Gafilo in 2004.
Storm name | Dates active | Max wind km/h (mph) | Min pressure (mbar) | Areas affected | Damage (USD) | Deaths | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blanche | March 2–7 | 100 (65) | 984 | Northern Territory, Western Australia | None | None | |
Enawo | March 2–7 | 205 (125) | 932 | Madagascar, Réunion | $20 million | 99 | [17][18][16] |
17F | March 4–5 | Unspecified | 1006 | None | None | None | |
Fernando | March 6–14 | 70 (45) | 992 | Rodriques | None | None | |
21U | March 14–18 | Unspecified | Unspecified | None | None | None | |
TD | March 19–21 | Unspecified | 1008 | Philippines | None | None | |
18F | March 19–21 | Unspecified | 1007 | None | None | None | |
22U | March 20–24 | 95 (60) | 985 | Western Australia | None | None | |
Caleb | March 23–27 | 85 (50) | 989 | Cocos (Keeling) Islands | None | None | |
Debbie | March 23–30 | 175 (110) | 949 | Queensland, New South Wales, New Zealand | $2.67 billion | 14 | [19][20] |
25U | March 23–26 | Unspecified | Unspecified | None | None | None |
April[]
10 storms formed on April. One notable storm is Cyclone Ernie on Australian Region, is one of the quickest strengthening tropical cyclone on modern record. Crising also formed and affected Philippines in its lifespan.
Storm name | Dates active | Max wind km/h (mph) | Min pressure (mbar) | Areas affected | Damage (USD) | Deaths | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
19F | April 1–20 | Unspecified | 988 | Samoa, Niue | None | None | |
Ernie | April 5–10 | 220 (140) | 922 | None | None | None | |
27U | April 6–16 | 55 (35) | 998 | Northern Territory, Western Australia | None | None | |
Cook | April 6–10 | 155 (100) | 961 | Vanuatu, New Caledonia, New Zealand | Moderate | 1 | [21] |
02W (Crising) | April 13–20 | 55 (35) | 1006 | Philippines, Taiwan | $1.7 million | 10 | [22][23] |
Maarutha | April 15–17 | 75 (45)3 | 996 | Myanmar, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Thailand, Yunnan | $23.4 thousand | 4 | [24][25][26] |
Arlene | April 19–21 | 85 (50)4 | 990 | None | None | None | |
Frances | April 21 – May 1 | 120 (75) | 980 | New Guinea, Maluku, Northern Territory, Timor, Western Australia | None | None | |
Muifa (Dante) | April 22–29 | 65 (40) | 1002 | None | None | None | |
Greg | April 29 – May 3 | 65 (40) | 997 | None | None | None |
May[]
5 systems formed on May. Tropical Storm Adrian, the earliest-known formation of a named storm in eastern Pacific proper, formed on May 9 and lasted until 10th of this month. Cyclone Donna also formed, which is the strongest Off-season South Pacific Cyclone on the month of May.
Storm name | Dates active | Max wind km/h (mph) | Min pressure (mbar) | Areas affected | Damage (USD) | Deaths | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Donna | May 1–10 | 205 (125) | 935 | Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Fiji, New Caledonia, New Zealand | Significant | 2 | [27] |
Ella | May 7–14 | 110 (70) | 977 | Samoan Islands, Tonga, Wallis and Futuna | None | None | |
Adrian | May 9–10 | 75 (45)4 | 1004 | None | None | None | |
Mora | May 28–31 | 110 (70)3 | 978 | Sri Lanka, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, East India, Northeast India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Bhutan, Tibet | $1.36 billion | 135 | [28][29][30][31] |
Beatriz | May 31 – June 2 | 75 (45)4 | 1001 | Southwestern Mexico | $3.7 million | 7 |
June[]
7 systems formed on this month. On this list is Tropical Storm Bret, a tropical storm from a low-latitude tropical wave that affected Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, Venezuela, and Windward Islands., and Hurricane Dora (2017), that affected Southwestern Mexico. Also included is Severe Tropical Merbok from Western Pacific Ocean.
Storm name | Dates active | Max wind km/h (mph) | Min pressure (mbar) | Areas affected | Damage (USD) | Deaths | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Merbok | June 10–13 | 100 (65) | 985 | Philippines, South China | $90.8 million | None | |
Calvin | June 11–13 | 75 (45)4 | 1004 | Southwestern Mexico, Guatemala | Unknown | None | |
BOB 03 | June 11–13 | 55 (35)3 | 988 | Northeast India, Bangladesh | $223 million | 170 | [32] |
Bret | June 19–20 | 85 (50)4 | 1007 | Guyana, Venezuela, Trinidad and Tobago, Windward Islands | ≥$3 million | 2 | |
Cindy | June 20–23 | 95 (60)4 | 991 | Honduras, Belize, Cayman Islands, Yucatán Peninsula, Cuba, Southern United States, Eastern United States | $25 million | 2 | [33] |
Dora | June 25–28 | 165 (105)4 | 974 | Southwestern Mexico | Minimum | None | |
TD | June 29 – July 1 | Unspecified | 1008 | Japan | None | None |
July[]
23 systems formed on the month of July, making it the busiest month of this year. On the West Pacific, Tropical Storm Nanmadol, Tropical Storm Talas, Typhoon Noru, Tropical Storm Kulap, Tropical Storm Sonca, Tropical Storm Roke (Fabian), Typhoon Nesat, Tropical Storm Haitang (Huaning) and Tropical Storm Nalgae formed. On the East Pacific, Hurricanes Eugene, Fernanda, Hilary and Irwin., a depression and Tropical Storm Greg formed. On the Atlantic, Tropical Storm Don, Tropical Storm Emily, and a weak depression formed. On the North Indian Ocean, two depressions formed.
Storm name | Dates active | Max wind km/h (mph) | Min pressure (mbar) | Areas affected | Damage (USD) | Deaths | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nanmadol (Emong) | July 1–4 | 100 (65) | 985 | Japan | $1.99 billion | 41 | [34][35][36][37] |
TD | July 4–7 | 55 (35) | 1010 | Taiwan, Ryukyu Islands | None | None | |
Four | July 5–7 | 45 (30)4 | 1009 | None | None | None | |
Eugene | July 7–12 | 185 (115)4 | 966 | Baja California Peninsula, California | None | None | |
Fernanda | July 12–22 | 230 (145)4 | 948 | Hawaii | None | None | |
TD | July 13–16 | 55 (35) | 1006 | None | None | None | |
Talas | July 14–17 | 95 (60) | 985 | Hainan, Indochina | $80.1 million | 14 | [38][39] |
Don | July 17–18 | 85 (50)4 | 1005 | Windward Islands, Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago | None | None | |
Eight-E | July 17–20 | 55 (35)4 | 1007 | None | None | None | |
Greg | July 17–26 | 95 (60)4 | 1000 | None | None | None | |
BOB 04 | July 18–19 | 45 (30)3 | 992 | Orissa, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh | $34.3 million | 7 | [40] |
Noru | July 19 – August 8 | 175 (110) | 935 | Japan | $100 million | 2 | [41][42] |
Kulap | July 20–28 | 75 (45) | 1002 | None | None | None | |
Hilary | July 21–30 | 175 (110)4 | 969 | Southwestern Mexico | None | None | |
Sonca | July 21–29 | 65 (40) | 994 | Hainan, Indochina | $306 million | 37 | [43][44][45] |
Roke (Fabian) | July 21–23 | 65 (40) | 1002 | Philippines, Taiwan, South China | None | None | |
Irwin | July 22 – August 1 | 150 (90)4 | 970 | None | None | None | |
Nesat (Gorio) | July 25–30 | 150 (90) | 960 | Philippines, Ryukyu Islands, Taiwan, East China | $281 million | 3 | [46] |
TD | July 25–29 | 55 (35) | 1006 | None | None | None | |
LAND 01 | July 26–27 | 45 (30)3 | 992 | West Bengal, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh | $2.19 billion | 152 | [47][48] |
Haitang (Huaning) | July 27 – August 2 | 85 (50) | 985 | Taiwan, East China | $3.77 million | None | |
Emily | July 30 – August 1 | 95 (60)4 | 1001 | Florida | $10 million | None | [49] |
Nalgae | July 31 – August 5 | 85 (50) | 990 | None | None | None |
August[]
15 storms formed in August 2017. Typhoon Banyan, Typhoon Hato, Tropical Storm Pakhar, Typhoon Sanvu, and Severe Tropical Storm Mawar formed on the West Pacific. On the Atlantic, Hurricane Franklin, Hurricane Gert, Hurricane Harvey, and Hurricane Irma formed. On the East Pacific, a weak depression, Tropical Storm Jova, Hurricane Kenneth and another tropical storm, Tropical Storm Lidia formed.
Storm name | Dates active | Max wind km/h (mph) | Min pressure (mbar) | Areas affected | Damage (USD) | Deaths | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eleven-E | August 4–5 | 55 (35)4 | 1006 | None | None | None | |
Franklin | August 7–10 | 140 (85)4 | 981 | Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, Cayman Islands, Belize, Yucatán Peninsula, Central Mexico | $15 million | None | |
01U | August 8 | 35 (25) | 1005 | None | None | None | |
Banyan | August 10–17 | 150 (90) | 955 | None | None | None | |
Jova | August 12–14 | 65 (40)4 | 1003 | Western Mexico | None | None | |
Gert | August 12–17 | 175 (110)4 | 962 | Bermuda, East Coast of the United States, Atlantic Canada | None | 2 | |
Harvey | August 17 – September 1 | 215 (130)4 | 937 | Barbados, Suriname, Guyana, Windward Islands, Jamaica, Cayman Islands, Nicaragua, Belize, Yucatán Peninsula, Northeastern Mexico, Southern United States (Texas, Louisiana), Eastern United States | $125 billion | 107 | |
Kenneth | August 18 – August 23 | 215 (130) | 951 | None | None | None | |
Hato (Isang) | August 19–24 | 140 (85) | 965 | Philippines, Taiwan, South China, Vietnam | $6.4 billion | 24 | |
Pakhar (Jolina) | August 24–27 | 100 (65) | 985 | Philippines, South China, Vietnam, Thailand | $115 million | 13 | |
TD | August 25–26 | Unspecified | 1002 | Vietnam | None | None | |
Sanvu | August 27 – September 3 | 150 (90) | 955 | Mariana Islands, Ogasawara Islands | Unknown | 1 | |
TD | August 28–29 | 55 (35) | 1002 | Philippines | Unknown | None | |
Mawar | August 30 – September 4 | 95 (60) | 990 | Philippines, South China | $1.53 million | None | |
Irma | August 30 – September 12 | 285 (180)4 | 914 | Cape Verde, Leeward Islands (Barbuda, Saint Martin, Saint Barthélemy, U.S. Virgin Islands), Puerto Rico, Hispaniola, Turks and Caicos Islands, The Bahamas, Cuba, Southeastern United States (Florida and Georgia), Northeastern United States | $64.76 billion | 134 | |
Lidia | August 31 – September 3 | 100 (65)4 | 986 | Western Mexico, Baja California Peninsula, Arizona, California | $36.1 million | 20 |
September[]
12 cyclones existed in September 2017. In the Western Pacific, Typhoons Talim and Doksuri, as well as Tropical Storm Guchol and Tropical Depression 22W (Nando) formed. In the Eastern Pacific, Hurricanes Otis, Max, Norma, and Tropical Storm Pilar existed during September. The strongest cyclone of September was Hurricane Maria, which was the second Category 5 hurricane to make landfall in the Atlantic in 2017. Hurricanes Jose, Katia, and Lee also existed in the Atlantic.
Storm name | Dates active | Max wind km/h (mph) | Min pressure (mbar) | Areas affected | Damage (USD) | Deaths | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Guchol (Kiko) | September 3–7 | 65 (40) | 1000 | Philippines, Taiwan, East China | None | None | |
Jose | September 5–22 | 250 (155) | 938 | Leeward Islands, East Coast of the United States | $2.84 million | 0 (1) | |
Katia | September 5–9 | 165 (105) | 972 | Eastern Mexico | $3.26 million | 3 (0) | |
Talim (Lannie) | September 8–17 | 175 (110) | 935 | Mariana Islands, Taiwan, East China, Japan | $750 million | 5 | |
Doksuri (Maring) | September 10–16 | 150 (90) | 955 | Philippines, Hainan, Indochina, Bangladesh | $819 million | 45 | |
Otis | September 11–19 | 185 (115) | 965 | None | None | None | |
Max | September 13–15 | 150 (90) | 980 | Southern Mexico | $19.8 million | 1 | |
Norma | September 14–20 | 120 (75) | 985 | Baja California Peninsula | None | None | |
Lee | September 14–30 | 185 (115) | 962 | None | None | None | |
Maria | September 16–30 | 280 (175) | 908 | Lesser Antilles (British Virgin Islands, Dominica, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Saint Croix), Puerto Rico, Hispaniola, Turks and Caicos Islands, The Bahamas, Southeastern United States, Mid-Atlantic States, United Kingdom, Ireland, France, Spain | $91.606 billion | 3,057 | |
22W (Nando) | September 23–25 | 55 (35) | 1002 | Philippines, South China, Vietnam | Minimal | None | |
Pilar | September 23–25 | 85 (50) | 1000 | Western Mexico | Minimal | None |
October[]
14 cyclones existed in October 2017. The strongest tropical cyclone in this month was Typhoon Lan, which was the third most intense tropical cyclone based on central pressure. Along with Lan, Tropical Depression 23W, Tropical Depressions 26W and 29W, Tropical Storm Saola, Typhoons Khanun, and Damrey existed in the Western Pacific. In the Atlantic, Hurricanes Nate, Ophelia, as well as Tropical Storm Philippe existed during the month. In the Eastern Pacific, Tropical Storms Ramon and Selma formed during the month. In the North Indian Ocean, Land Depression 02 and Depression BOB 05 formed during the month.
Storm name | Dates active | Max wind km/h (mph) | Min pressure (mbar) | Areas affected | Damage (USD) | Deaths | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ramon | October 3–4 | 75 (45) | 1002 | Southern Mexico | None | None | |
Nate | October 4–9 | 150 (90) | 981 | Central America, Cayman Islands, Cuba, Yucatán Peninsula, Gulf Coast of the United States (Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama), East Coast of the United States, Atlantic Canada | $787 million | 48 | |
23W | October 7–10 | 45 (35) | 1000 | Philippines, Hainan, Indochina | $602 Million | 109 | |
LAND 02 | October 9–10 | 45 (35) | 996 | Bangladesh, West Bengal, Jharkhand, Odisha, Andhra Pradesh | Unknown | 7 | |
Ophelia | October 9–16 | 185 (115) | 959 | Azores, Portugal, Spain, France, Ireland, United Kingdom, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Estonia, and Russia | > $87.7 million | 3 | |
Khanun (Odette) | October 11–16 | 175 (110) | 955 | Philippines, Taiwan, South China, Vietnam | $373 million | 1 | |
Lan (Paolo) | October 15–23 | 250 (155) | 915 | Caroline Islands, Philippines, Japan, South Korea | $2 Billion | 17 | |
26W | October 18–19 | 45 (30) | 1002 | Philippines | Minimal | 14 | |
BOB 05 | October 19–22 | 45 (30) | 997 | Odisha, West Bengal, Northeastern India, Bangladesh | Unknown | 1 | |
Saola (Quedan) | October 22–29 | 120 (75) | 975 | Caroline Islands, Japan | $250 Million | None | |
Selma | October 27–28 | 65 (40) | 1004 | El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua | Unknown | 17 | |
Philippe | October 28–29 | 65 (40) | 1000 | Central America, Cayman Islands, Yucatán Peninsula, Cuba, Florida | Minimal | None | |
29W | October 30-November 7 | 55 (35) | 1004 | Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Malaysia | Minimal | 7 | |
Damrey (Ramil) | October 31-November 4 | 165 (105) | 970 | Philippines, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand | $1.03 Billion | 151 |
November[]
Storm name | Dates active | Max wind km/h (mph) | Min pressure (mbar) | Areas affected | Damage (USD) | Deaths | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rina | November 5–9 | 95 (60) | 991 | None | None | None | |
Haikui (Salome) | November 7–13 | 75 (45) | 998 | Philippines, South China, Central Vietnam | $4.26 Million | None | |
BOB 06 | November 15–17 | 45 (35) | 1000 | Odisha, West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh | Unknown | 20 | |
Kirogi (Tino) | November 16–19 | 75 (45) | 1000 | Philippines, Malaysia, Indochina | $10 Million | 10 | |
Numa | November 16–20 | 100 (65) | 995 | United Kingdom, Ireland, France, Italy, Tunisia, Greece, Turkey | $100 Million | 22 | |
Cempaka | November 22–29 | 65 (40) | 998 | Central Java, Special Region of Yogyakarta, East Java, Bali, Banten, West Java | $74 Million | 41 | |
Dahlia | November 26-December 4 | 100 (65) | 985 | Sumatra, Java | None | None | |
Ockhi | November 29-December 6 | 185 (115) | 976 | Sri Lanka, India, Maldives | $920 Million | 318 |
December[]
Storm name | Dates active | Max wind km/h (mph) | Min pressure (mbar) | Areas affected | Damage (USD) | Deaths | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
05U | December 1–2 | Unspecified | Not specified | None | None | None | |
BOB 08 | December 6–9 | 55 (35) | 1002 | Southern Thailand, , Aceh, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Odisha, West Bengal, Bangladesh | Unknown | 20 | |
Guará | December 9–11 | 75 (45) | 996 | Brazil | None | None | |
Kai-tak (Urduja) | December 13–23 | 75 (45) | 995 | Caroline Islands, Philippines, Malaysia | >74.3 million | 83 | |
02F | December 16–18 | Not specified | 1003 | None | None | None | |
03F | December 17–19 | Not specified | 1000 | None | None | None | |
04F | December 20–26 | Not specified | 998 | Fiji | None | None | |
Tembin (Vinta) | December 20–26 | 130 (80) | 970 | Caroline Islands,
Philippines, Malaysia, Vietnam |
>42 million | 266 | |
Hilda | December 26–29 | 100 (65) | 980 | Western Australia | Minimal | None | |
Ava | December 27-January 9 | 155 (100) | 965 | Madagascar | $4.62 million | 73 | |
Bolaven (Agaton) | December 29-January 4 | 65 (40) | 1002 | Caroline Islands, Philippines, Vietnam | $11.1 million | 3 |
Global effects[]
Season name | Areas affected | Systems formed | Named systems | Damage (USD) | Deaths |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 Atlantic hurricane season | Guyana, Venezuela, Trinidad and Tobago, Windward Islands, Honduras, Belize, Cayman Islands, Mexico, Cuba, United States, Barbados, Nicaragua, Bermuda, Suriname, Jamaica, Atlantic Canada, Cape Verde, Leeward Islands, Puerto Rico, Hispaniola, Turks and Caicos, The Bahamas, United Kingdom, Ireland, France, Spain, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Panama, Azores, Portugal, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Estonia, Russia | 18 | 17 | ≥$294.92 billion | 3,364 |
2017 Mediterranean tropical cyclone season | United Kingdom, Ireland, France, Italy, Tunisia, Greece, Turkey | 1 | 1 | $100 million | 22 |
2017 South Atlantic tropical cyclone | Brazil | 1 | 1 | $0 | None |
2017 Pacific hurricane season | Mexico, Guatemala, Baja California Peninsula, California, Arizona, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Honduras | 20 | 18 | $375.28 million | 45 |
2017 Pacific typhoon season1 | Philippines, Vietnam, Cambodia, Malaysia, Taiwan, Japan, China, Ryukyu Islands, Mariana Islands, Bangladesh, Ogasawara Islands, Caroline Islands, Thailand | 41 | 27 | $14.3 billion | 860 |
2017 North Indian Ocean cyclone season | Myanmar, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India, Thailand, Sri Lanka, Maldives, Malaysia, Aceh, China, Bangladesh, Bhutan | 10 | 3 | >$3.65 billion | 834 |
2016–17 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season1 | Réunion, Mauritius, Mozambique, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Malawi, Madagascar, Rodrigues | 5 | 4 | $236.5 million | 376 |
2017–18 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season2 | Madagascar, Réunion, Mauritius, Mozambique | 2 | 1 | $4.62 million | 73 |
2016–17 Australian region cyclone season1 | Northern Territory, Western Australia, Cocos Islands, Christmas Island, Queensland, New Caledonia, New South Wales, New Zealand, New Guinea, Maluku, Timor | 22 | 8 | $2.82 billion | 16 |
2017–18 Australian region cyclone season2 | Java, Sumatra, Indonesia, Western Australia | 6 | 3 | $83.6 million | 41 |
2016–17 South Pacific cyclone season1 | Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Fiji, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Southern Cook Islands, Tonga, Samoa, American Samoa, Wallis and Futuna | 17 | 4 | $43 million | 3 |
2017–18 South Pacific cyclone season2 | Fiji, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Wallis and Futuna, Samoan Islands, Tonga, Vanuatu, Rotuma | 3 | 0 | $285 million | 11 |
Worldwide | (See above) | 146 | 87 | > $321.44 billion | 5,645 |
See also[]
- Weather of 2017
- Tropical cyclones by year
- List of earthquakes in 2017
- Tornadoes of 2017
- 2017 wildfire season
Notes[]
- ^ The "strength" of a tropical cyclone is measured by the minimum barometric pressure, not wind speed. Most meteorological organizations rate the intensity of a storm by this figure, so the lower the minimum pressure of the storm, the more intense or "stronger" it is considered to be. The strongest winds were actually from Irma, at 180 mph (285 km/h).
1 Only systems that formed either on or after January 1, 2017 are counted in the seasonal totals.
2 Only systems that formed either before or on December 31, 2017 are counted in the seasonal totals.
3 The wind speeds for this tropical cyclone are based on the IMD Scale which uses 3-minute sustained winds.
4 The wind speeds for this tropical cyclone are based on the Saffir Simpson Scale which uses 1-minute sustained winds.
References[]
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- ^ a b "Irma and Harvey should kill any doubt that climate change is real". The Washington Post. September 7, 2017.
- ^ "Why Hurricane Irma Could Hurt, a Lot: Much Lies in Harm's Way". The New York Times. September 7, 2017.
- ^ "Hot water ahead for Hurricane Irma". NASA Global Climate Change. September 7, 2017.
- ^ "Miami's mayor on Hurricane Irma: 'If this isn't climate change, I don't know what is'". Miami Herald. September 8, 2017.
- ^ "Scott Pruitt says it's not the time to talk climate change. For him, it never is". The Washington Post. September 9, 2017.
- ^ "Trump weighs in on climate change: Hey, there have been big hurricanes before". The Washington Post. September 14, 2017.
- ^ "Richard Branson criticises Donald Trump after hurricanes: 'Whole world knows climate change is real'". The Independent. September 20, 2017.
- ^ "UN secretary general links hurricane devastation to climate change". Climate Home. September 19, 2017.
- ^ "Hurricane period ravaging Atlantic is the most active on record". Global News. October 5, 2017.
- ^ "Hurricanes: A perfect storm of chance and climate change?". BBC. September 21, 2017.
- ^ "Global Catastrophe Recap January 2017" (PDF). thoughtleadership.aonbenfield.com. Aon Benfield. Retrieved February 8, 2017.
- ^ "'Auring' damage to agro-fishery in Negros Occidental reaches P7.14M". Sunstar. January 21, 2017.
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- ^ "'Crising' death toll in Cebu rises to 10". Philstar. April 17, 2017.
- ^ "Capitol pegs Crising damage at P84.8M". Inquirer. April 25, 2017.
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- ^ "Three Die in Cyclone Maarutha". Reliefweb. April 18, 2017.
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External links[]
Tropical cyclone year articles (2010–2019) |
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2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 |
Regional Specialized Meteorological Centers
- US National Hurricane Center – North Atlantic, Eastern Pacific
- Central Pacific Hurricane Center – Central Pacific
- Japan Meteorological Agency – NW Pacific
- India Meteorological Department – Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea
- Météo-France – La Reunion – South Indian Ocean from 30°E to 90°E
- Fiji Meteorological Service – South Pacific west of 160°E, north of 25° S
Tropical Cyclone Warning Centers
- Meteorology, Climatology, and Geophysical Agency of Indonesia – South Indian Ocean from 90°E to 141°E, generally north of 10°S
- Australian Bureau of Meteorology (TCWC's Perth, Darwin & Brisbane) – South Indian Ocean & South Pacific Ocean from 90°E to 160°E, generally south of 10°S
- Papua New Guinea National Weather Service – South Pacific Ocean from 141°E to 160°E, generally north of 10°S
- Meteorological Service of New Zealand Limited – South Pacific west of 160°E, south of 25°S
This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Weather Service.
- Tropical cyclones in 2017
- Tropical cyclones by year
- 2017 Atlantic hurricane season
- 2017 Pacific hurricane season
- 2017 Pacific typhoon season
- 2017 North Indian Ocean cyclone season
- 2016–17 Australian region cyclone season
- 2017–18 Australian region cyclone season
- 2016–17 South Pacific cyclone season
- 2017–18 South Pacific cyclone season
- 2016–17 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season
- 2017–18 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season