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2006 Pacific typhoon season
| First storm formed:
| May 9, 2006
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| Last storm dissipated:
| Season still active
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| Strongest storm:
| Yagi and Cimaron – 910 hPa, 105 kt (10-min)
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| Total storms:
| 21 official plus 2 unofficial
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| Typhoons:
| 14
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| Super typhoons:
| 7 (unofficial)
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| Total fatalities:
| At least 2,114
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|
|
The 2006 Pacific typhoon season has no official bounds; it runs year-round in 2006, but most tropical cyclones tend to form in the northwestern Pacific Ocean between May and November.<ref>http://www.typhoon2000.ph/garyp_mgtcs/may03sum.txt</ref> These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical cyclones form in the northwestern Pacific Ocean.
The scope of this article is limited to the Pacific Ocean, north of the equator and west of the international date line. Storms that form east of the date line and north of the equator are called hurricanes; see 2006 Pacific hurricane season. Tropical Storms formed in the entire West Pacific basin are assigned a name by the Japan Meteorological Agency. Tropical depressions in this basin have the "W" suffix added to their number. Tropical depressions that enter or form in the Philippine area of responsibility are assigned a name by the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration or PAGASA. This can result in the same storm having two names.
[edit] Storms
In storm information below, windspeed advisories differ from the Joint Typhoon Warning Center to the Japan Meteorological Agency as the JTWC uses the U.S. criteria of 1-minute mean to designate maximum sustained winds, while the JMA uses the 10-minute mean wind criteria to designate tropical cyclone maximum sustained winds. This difference generally means that JTWC maximum winds will appear to be higher than the maximum winds described by the JMA for the same cyclone.
[edit] Typhoon Chanchu (Caloy)
- Main article: Typhoon Chanchu (2006)
</div>
An area of disturbed weather formed around May 5 and moved westward. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center released a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert on May 8, shortly before it upgraded the storm to a Tropical Depression. It became a tropical storm on May 9. The name "Chanchu" was submitted by Macau and means pearl. The JTWC then upgraded it to a typhoon on May 10. The storm maintained a westerly track and made two landfalls in the Philippines, causing 32 deaths in the country<ref name="cnn">http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/05/14/philippines.typhoon.reut/index.html</ref> and $1.9 million in damage, much of it to agriculture.<ref name="reuters">http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=science...</ref>
After Chanchu left the Philippines, the JMA upgraded it to a typhoon. Chanchu turned to the north in the South China Sea and affected hundreds of Vietnamese fishermen. Then, it became a super typhoon, only the second ever recorded in the South China Sea, but was one for only less than a day. The only other super typhoon to form in the South China Sea in recorded history is Ryan in 1995.<ref name="jtwc">https://metoc.npmoc.navy.mil/jtwc/atcr/1995atcr/pdf/wnp/19w.pdf</ref> Chanchu is also the most intense typhoon on Hong Kong Observatory's record to enter the South China Sea in May. Chanchu necessitated the Strong Wind Signal no. 3 in both Hong Kong and Macau.<ref name="hko">http://www.hko.gov.hk/cgi-bin/hko/warndb_e1.pl?opt=91&tcname=CHANCHU&submit=Submit+Query</ref><ref name="smg">http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?pp_cat=11&art_id=18859&sid=7990894&con_type=1</ref> It turned northeastward and made a final landfall along the southeastern seaboard of China on May 18 resulting in at least 25 deaths and a direct economic loss of 7 billion yuan. Chanchu became extratropical later that day.
[edit] Tropical Storm Jelawat (Domeng)
An area of disturbed weather that began as a part of a monsoon trough<ref>http://www.monsoontyphoons.com/2006/jelawat.html</ref> formed around June 23 east of the Philippines, and moved slowly over the islands. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center released a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert on June 25 as the system moved over the Philippines, and upgraded the system to Tropical Depression 03W the next day. The depression continued to organize as it moved away from the Philippines, and the JTWC upgraded it to Tropical Storm 03W on June 27. The Japan Meteorological Agency designated the storm as Tropical Storm Jelawat shortly after. The name Jelawat was submitted by Malaysia, and is a name for a type of carp.
Jelawat moved generally northwestward over the South China Sea during the next day, and weakened back to a tropical depression on June 28. The depression made landfall in southern China at 7:40 a.m. CST on June 29<ref name="cma">http://www.cma.gov.cn/cma_new/tqyb/zhyj/t20060629_137632.phtml</ref> and dissipated later that day.
The storm dropped heavy rainfall across southern China and Haikou recorded a rainfall of 309.7 mm (12 inches) during the storm passage.<ref>http://mb.hainan.gov.cn/qxnews.asp?name=qxxx290959481.txt</ref> A total of 8.6 inches (220 mm) rain fell in 16 hours in Kampung Bundu, Malaysia.<ref name="nst">http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/nst/Thursday/National/20060629080308/Article/local1_html</ref> The rainfall killed seven people and left one missing. The flooding from Jelawat ruined 200 square kilometres of farmland and destroyed 190 houses.<ref name="shanghaidaily">http://www.shanghaidaily.com/art/2006/06/30/284709/Deadly_storms_strike_across_China.htm</ref>
[edit] Typhoon Ewiniar (Ester)
- Main article: Typhoon Ewiniar (2006)
On June 29, a persistent tropical disturbance was classified as a tropical depression by the JTWC while east of Palau. The depression moved northwestward and was upgraded to Tropical Storm 04W by the JTWC on June 30. The JMA designated the storm Tropical Storm Ewiniar at around the same time. The name "Ewiniar" was submitted by the Federated States of Micronesia, and refers to a traditional storm god of Chuuk.
Ewiniar was responsible for at least 30 deaths in China, which it brushed as a typhoon. The typhoon gradually weakened as it moved over colder waters, and made landfall in South Korea on July 10 as a severe tropical storm. As Ewiniar moved across the country, it passed within 30 miles (50 km) of Seoul.<ref>http://www.kma.go.kr/fcst/typ_eng/typ_eng_200607102220_03_029.html</ref> No tropical cyclone had come that close to Seoul in recent years.[citation needed] The passage of the storm brought heavy rain that triggered floods and mudslides in the southern part of the country, killing at least six people.<ref name="washpost"/> Ewiniar became extratropical over the Sea of Japan on the same day.
[edit] Severe Tropical Storm Bilis (Florita)
|
| Severe Tropical Storm Bilis (Typhoon Florita) Tropical Storm 05W
| STS
|
|
|
|
| Duration
| July 8—July 15, 2006
|
| Intensity
| 60 kt (10-min), 970 hPa
|
- Main article: Tropical Storm Bilis (2006)
A tropical disturbance northeast of Yap developed sufficient convection to be designated a tropical depression on July 8. The depression strengthened into a tropical storm the next day, and was designated Tropical Storm Bilis by the JMA. The word "Bilis", submitted by the Philippines, means speed or swiftness. PAGASA operationally treated this storm as a typhoon for a short time on July 13, but it officially remained a tropical storm as it moved west-northwestward toward Taiwan.
After moving over northern Taiwan, Bilis made landfall in Fujian, China at 12:50 p.m. CST on July 14,<ref>http://www.cma.gov.cn/cma_new/tqyb/zhyj/t20060714_140251.phtml</ref> weakening into a tropical depression inland the next day. JMA carried the system as a tropical depression until July 17.<ref>http://www.jma.go.jp/jp/g3/images/observe/06071706.png</ref>
Bilis brought very heavy rain, widespread flooding, landslides, and strong winds to the Philippines, Taiwan and areas of mainland China, causing 672 deaths and $4.4 billion (2006 USD) in damage.<ref name="PRCreport">Typhoon Committee (2006-12-04). Review of the 2006 Typhoon Season. World Meteorological Organization.</ref>
[edit] Typhoon Kaemi (Glenda)
A tropical depression formed on July 18 near the Caroline Islands, it quickly strengthened to tropical storm strength the same day. On July 19, the storm was named Kaemi. The name was submitted by South Korea and is a Korean word for ant. It strengthened into a severe tropical storm on July 20, and further deepened into a typhoon 24 hours later. Kaemi made landfall in Jinjiang, Fujian at 3:50 p.m. CST on July 25 as a minimal typhoon.<ref>http://www.cma.gov.cn/cma_new/qxxw/t20060725_142067.phtml</ref>
Heavy rainfall in Taiwan caused flooding and four minor injuries. Rain also fell heavily in the northern Philippines.<ref name="trmm">http://trmm.gsfc.nasa.gov/publications_dir/kaemi_july06.html</ref> The storm has also killed at least 32 people in China, while another 60 people are missing.<ref name="scotsman">http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=1095622006</ref>
[edit] Typhoon Prapiroon (Henry)
PAGASA named a system east of the Philippines as Tropical Depression Henry later on the same day that the JMA recognised it as a tropical depression on July 28. The JTWC upgraded this system to a tropical storm on the morning of August 1. Hong Kong Observatory also did so and issued the Tropical Cyclone Signal No. 1 that same afternoon, and shortly after the JMA upgraded the system to Tropical Storm Prapiroon. The name Prapiroon was submitted by Thailand and is the name of a Thai rain deity. The JMA upgraded the storm to a severe tropical storm on the morning of August 2. PAGASA ceased advisories on the storm shortly after as it moved out of its area of responsibility. The JTWC and the HKO upgraded Prapiroon to a typhoon at 3 a.m. UTC, while the JMA officially upgraded it to a typhoon at 12 p.m. UTC (8 p.m. HKT). Prapiroon necessitated the first Tropical Cyclone Signal No. 8 in Macau this year.<ref>(Chinese) http://hk.news.yahoo.com/060803/12/1qxe7.html, Ming Pao </ref> In Hong Kong, the flag raising ceremony at the Golden Bauhinia Square was cancelled due to strong wind.<ref>http://www.info.gov.hk/gia/general/200608/03/P200608030083.htm</ref> Prapiroon made landfall at 7:20 p.m. CST on August 3.<ref>http://www.cma.gov.cn/cma_new/tqyb/zhyj/t20060804_143710.phtml</ref>
The strong winds due to the storm resulted in 70% of flights being cancelled, delayed or diverted in the Hong Kong International Airport, the highest since the opening in 1999. However, the airport remained open throughout the storm passage and many flights successfully landed or took off on August 3.<ref>http://hk.news.yahoo.com/060803/12/1qx33.html</ref> Inbound flights were rerouted to nearby airports and outbound flights were cancelled or postponed.<ref>http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2006/8/2/worldupdates/2006-08-02T130644Z_01_NOOTR_RTRJONC_0_-262076-1&sec=Worldupdates</ref> On landfall in Guangdong province, China, it forced the evacuation of some 660,000 people and caused an estimated 5.4 billion Chinese yuan worth of damage. 77 people were reported killed.<ref>http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2006-08/06/content_4925398.htm</ref>. It also affected Hunan, Guangxi and Hainan.
[edit] Typhoon Maria
JMA identified a tropical depression southwest of Minami Torishima on August 4 and began issuing advisories. On August 5, the system had sufficiently strengthened to be named Tropical Storm Maria. The name Maria was submitted by the United States and is a girls' name.
The JTWC designated this system as a tropical depression later that day before upgrading it to a tropical storm on August 6, while the JMA upgraded it to a severe tropical storm at 6 a.m. UTC. Maria turned to the north, threatening Japan's mainland. JTWC briefly upgraded Maria to a typhoon on August 7, but issued its final advisory two days later as it started to turn extratropical.
In post-operational analysis, the JMA upgraded Maria to a 70-kt typhoon.
[edit] Typhoon Saomai (Juan)
- Main article: Typhoon Saomai (2006)
The JTWC identified a tropical depression near the Caroline Islands late on August 4 UTC. The JMA designated it as such at 12 a.m. UTC August 5. Nine hours later, the JTWC upgraded Tropical Depression 08W to a tropical storm, three hours before the JMA named it Saomai. The name is from the Vietnamese "sao Mai", meaning "Morning Star",<ref>http://vdict.com/?dictionary=2&word=sao+mai&typings=-1&quickm=0&autoc=0&liststring=&submit2=Lookup</ref> a reference to the planet Venus.
The JTWC designated it a typhoon at 3 p.m. UTC August 6. The JMA upgraded Saomai to a Severe Tropical Storm at 6 p.m. UTC, and as it continued to strengthen, it was upgraded to a typhoon just 12 hours later. Saomai passed into the Area of Responsibility of PAGASA on August 8 and was named Typhoon Juan by PAGASA. On August 8, the storm underwent explosive development, and by August 9 it had become a category 5-equivalent super typhoon.
Saomai made landfall in Zhejiang, China on August 10 with maximum sustained winds of 115 knots (1-minute mean), stronger than Chanchu earlier this season.<ref>http://www.nmc.gov.cn/news/viewArticle.do?method=viewArticle&id=ff8080810cf70fba010cf76b61770002</ref> Saomai was responsible for at least 458 deaths, mostly in China, and $2.5 billion (2006 USD) in damage.<ref name="PRCreport"/>
[edit] Severe Tropical Storm Bopha (Inday)
The JMA identified a tropical depression in the open Pacific on August 5. PAGASA named this storm late on August 5 as it was forecast to enhance the southwest monsoon and bring rains to the Philippines. JMA upgraded it to Tropical Storm Bopha on August 6. The name Bopha was submitted by Cambodia and is a flower and girls' name.
The JTWC recognised its existence as a tropical depression at 9 a.m. UTC the same day before upgrading it to a tropical storm at 3 p.m. UTC. The JMA then upgraded it to a severe tropical storm as it slowly churned westwards at 12 a.m. UTC August 7 before downgrading it 18 hours later. Bopha unexpectedly restrengthened into a severe tropical storm at 3 a.m. UTC August 8, before weakening back to a tropical storm at 12 p.m. UTC.
Bopha later made landfall on Taiwan at about 2 a.m. local time on August 9. Tropical Storm Bopha then weakened into a tropical depression before degenerating into a remnant low on August 10.
[edit] Severe Tropical Storm Wukong
Tropical Depression (11W from the JTWC) formed south of Iwo Jima on August 12. Early August 13, as it moved to the north-northwest, the JTWC upgraded it to a tropical storm. The JMA named it Wukong later that day. Wukong was submitted by People's Republic of China, and it is the name of a character in a Chinese epic. Wukong absorbed Tropical Storm Sonamu shortly before landfall in Japan. Wukong then stalled over Kyūshū, before starting to jog to the north-northwest. It was downgraded to a tropical depression on August 20.
In post-operational analysis by the JMA, Wukong was upgraded to a severe tropical storm.
[edit] Tropical Storm Sonamu (Katring)
On August 13, a tropical depression formed south of Naha, Okinawa, and was named Katring by PAGASA and Sonamu by JMA. The name Sonamu was submitted by DPR Korea and signifies a pine tree. Sonamu began interacting with nearby Tropical Storm Wukong on August 15, with the outflow from the stronger Wukong producing unfavourable shear over the cyclone. The JMA declared the system a tropical depression and stopped issuing advisories on August 16. The JTWC followed shortly after.
[edit] Hurricane/Typhoon Ioke
- Main article: Hurricane Ioke
On August 27, Hurricane Ioke, which had formed in the Central Pacific, crossed the International Date Line and entered the Japan Meteorological Agency's Area of Responsibility at around 6 a.m. UTC. Ioke had earlier affected Johnston Atoll. On August 31 the center of the typhoon passed very close to Wake Island; 200 people were evacuated from in advance its approach.<ref>http://www.khnl.com/Global/story.asp?S=5331801</ref> Typhoon Ioke then passed just to the northeast of Minami Torishima, which had been evacuated ahead of the storm, but as a weakened Category 3-equivalent typhoon. Ioke then turned to the northeast, weakening as it started undergoing extratropical transition. The JMA released its final advisory on September 7. The extratropical remnants of Ioke moved into the Bering Sea where it caused severe beach erosion along the western Alaskan coastline.<ref name="Alaska">Angela Hutti. "Storm on the Bering Sea", KTVA 11. Retrieved on 2006-09-08.</ref>
[edit] Typhoon Shanshan (Luis)
- Main article: Typhoon Shanshan (2006)
Hong Kong Observatory identified a tropical depression about 460 kilometres north of Yap on September 9, the same day the JMA recognised it. The JTWC declared the formation of Tropical Depression 14W the next day. On the afternoon of September 10, it entered the PAGASA AOR and was named Luis. Later at 12 p.m. UTC on the same day, the JMA upgraded the tropical depression to Tropical Storm Shanshan. The name Shanshan was contributed by Hong Kong and is a girls' name. Shanshan quickly strengthened and was upgraded into a severe tropical storm on September 11 and a typhoon later that day. Shanshan weakened slightly on September 14, but quickly restrengthened and reached category 4 status on the JTWC's scale. Shanshan passed through the Yaeyama Islands in the early morning hours of September 16. The JTWC reported that Shanshan was becoming extratropical early on September 17, as the typhoon weakened to a tropical storm. The JTWC issued its final advisory on Shanshan later that day, and the JMA issued its last advisory on September 19, after Shanshan completed extratropical transition.
As Shanshan neared Taiwan, the Central Weather Bureau and local officials warned of flooding and high winds. However, as Shanshan turned towards Japan, all warnings were cancelled. South Korean forecasters also issued warnings ahead of an expected landfall, but this did not materialise. Ships were diverted as ports were closed as a precaution, while some other boats were forced to remain docked.<ref>http://joongangdaily.joins.com/200609/17/200609172213525709900090409041.html</ref> In Japan, more than 90,000 people were evacuated from Yamaguchi Prefecture.<ref>http://www.topix.net/content/newscom/1057959765296100991311804140910322877786</ref>
Over 200 people were injured by Shanshan and 11 people were killed, mostly in Kyūshū, although two deaths were reported in South Korea. A tornado spawned by the typhoon caused a train derailment in Nobeoka, Miyazaki, Japan which caused no fatalities.<ref name="Nobeoka">http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/national/news/20060917it12.htm</ref> Peak gusts on Iriomote reached 155 mph (248 km/h).<ref>http://www.topix.net/content/newscom/1057959765296100991311804140910322877786</ref> Flights and trains were delayed, while electricity was cut to about 3000 homes in Korea. A ship also sank off Ulleungdo.<ref>http://sg.news.yahoo.com/060918/1/43hma.html</ref>
[edit] Typhoon Yagi
The Joint Typhoon Warning Center identified an area of disturbed weather northeast of Chuuk on September 13. The disturbance drifted to the north over the next few days, gradually increasing in organization. The JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert on the disturbance on September 16, and both the JTWC and JMA declared the system a tropical depression early on September 17. The JMA upgraded it to Tropical Storm Yagi later that morning as it moved erratically through the open Pacific Ocean, and the JTWC soon followed suit. The name Yagi was submitted by Japan and means Capricornus (goat). Yagi was upgraded to a severe tropical storm by the JMA on September 18, and the JTWC designated it a typhoon later that day. The JMA officially upgraded Yagi to typhoon status early on September 19. Yagi was upgraded briefly to a super typhoon by the JTWC from September 21 to September 22. On September 23, the JTWC reported that Yagi was becoming extratropical as it continued to weaken, and issued its final warning the next day. The JMA downgraded Yagi to a severe tropical storm on September 24. It was the third tropical cyclone in the NW Pacific Basin that attained Category 5 status in 2006. It started to recurve near Chichi-jima, and never affected major land areas. It became extratropical near the western Aleutians on September 25.
[edit] Typhoon Xangsane (Milenyo)
- Main article: Typhoon Xangsane (2006)
On September 25, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) named an active low pressure area within its area of responsibility Tropical Depression Milenyo. After issuing a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert earlier, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center issued its first warning on Tropical Depression 18W. On September 26 the Japan Meteorological Agency named this system Xangsane. The name Xangsane was submitted by Laos and means elephant. Later that day, the JMA upgraded Xangsane to a severe tropical storm. A bout of rapid intensification followed, and all three agencies, the JMA, JTWC and PAGASA all upgraded the storm to a typhoon late on September 26 or early September 27. Xangsane made landfall on Samar Island as a severe tropical storm.
The typhoon dropped heavy rainfall in the Philippines. To avoid the storm, transit authorities kept seacraft at several ports in the archipelago, leaving over 3,500 passengers stranded.<ref>http://www.news24.com/News24/World/News/0,,2-10-1462_2004589,00.html</ref> Xangsane also prompted Philippine officials to close all schools, financial markets, and government offices in and around Manila.<ref>http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/topofthehour.aspx?StoryId=51594</ref> The typhoon killed over 200 people in the county, and produced strong winds and rainfall, downing power lines and causing mudflows. The strong winds caused moderate crop damage totaling to $7.2 million (2006 USD).<ref>http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/10/01/typhoon.vietnam.ap/index.html</ref>
Xangsane made landfall as a typhoon near Hue early on October 1. The JTWC stopped issuing advisories soon after, and the JMA downgraded it to a severe tropical storm. Xangsane killed 71 in Vietnam.
[edit] Tropical Storm Bebinca (Neneng)
On October 1, a persistent area of low pressure just east of the Philippines developed into Tropical Depression 19W. The JMA had already been monitoring the storm. It was named Neneng by PAGASA, and later that evening was upgraded to a tropical storm by the Philippine authorities. The JMA and JTWC both designated the storm a tropical storm the next day, and it was named Bebinca by the JMA. Bebinca is a type of Macanese milk pudding.
The JTWC downgraded it to a tropical depression briefly between October 4 and October 5 as wind shear took its toll. Its low-level circulation then became exposed with dry air entering the system, and both the JMA and JTWC declared the storm as a dissipating tropical depression on October 6. It soon became entrained within the circulation of a storm-force extratropical low, which swept across the Honshū coastal waters and led to 33 people dead or missing.<ref>(Japanese) http://www.data.kishou.go.jp/bosai/report/new/iyun_sokuji20061004-09.pdf</ref>
[edit] Tropical Storm Rumbia
On October 3, a tropical depression south of Minami Torishima in high sea-surface temperatures gained enough convection and was designated Tropical Storm Rumbia by the JMA, although the JTWC had not even carried it as a tropical depression. Rumbia is a type of palm tree that yields sago. Later that day, the JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert, and began warnings on Tropical Depression 20W the next day. Rumbia slowly began to intensify while moving to the northwest, but on October 6 its low-level circulation became fully exposed, and the JTWC issued a final warning. The JMA followed suit soon after. The remnants of Rumbia were later no longer distinct from the extratropical low associated with Bebinca.
[edit] Typhoon Soulik
On October 9, an area of low pressure was found to have banding convection wrapping into a consolidating low-level circulation centre, and was declared a tropical depression by the JTWC. As the system strengthened further, it was upgraded to Tropical Storm 21W by the JTWC later that day. JMA followed suit and classified the storm as Tropical Storm Soulik. The name Soulik was submitted by the Federated States of Micronesia, and is a traditional title for Pohnpei chiefs. Soulik continued to intensify through October 10, and the JMA upgraded it to a severe tropical storm. Agrihan was put under a tropical storm watch, which was later upgraded to a warning. In 18 hours on October 11, 8 inches (205 mm) of rain was reported on Pagan Island.<ref>http://www.weather.unisys.com/hurricane/archive/06101106</ref> After days of gradual strengthening, it became a typhoon on October 12, stalling over Iwo Jima. Soulik reached Category 2 status on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale on October 13 before gradually weakening and moving northeastward rapidly as it became extratropical.
[edit] Typhoon Cimaron (Paeng)
An area of disturbed weather developed northwest of Chuuk on October 24. The disturbance moved west-northwestward over the next two days and gradually became better organized, and the Joint Typhoon Warning Center issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert on the system on October 26. The system was designated Tropical Depression 22W by the JTWC later that day. The system continued to strengthen, and the JTWC upgraded it to a tropical storm on October 27. The Japan Meteorological Agency later followed suit and designated the system Tropical Storm Cimaron. The name Cimaron was submitted by the Philippines, and is a type of wild ox. The system quickly intensified, and was upgraded to a severe tropical storm by the JMA later that day. The system continued its quick intensification and was upgraded to a typhoon by both the JTWC and JMA on October 28. Further intensification occurred overnight, and the typhoon had rapidly deepened 65 hPa in 24 hours, from 985 hPa to 920 hPa, causing the JTWC to upgrade it to a 140-kt super typhoon at 9 a.m. UTC on October 29. It made landfall at about 12:30 p.m. UTC the same day on Luzon.
Cimaron then re-intensified after crossing the island, but not to its original strength, and was expected to curve towards Hainan, instead of moving towards Vietnam as previously forecast. On November 1, the JTWC upgraded the typhoon back into a Category 3-equivalent storm, and forecast that it would make a direct impact on Hong Kong. However, prediction models showed conflicting forecasts, and Cimaron remained quasi-stationary and weakened to a severe tropical storm on November 2. Dry air entrainment caused further weakening, with the JTWC dropping it to a minimal tropical storm at 3 p.m. UTC the next day. It weakened further, upwelling itself. The JTWC issued its final warning at 3 p.m. UTC on November 4. The JMA continued advisories on Cimaron until 12 a.m. UTC on November 6, when it was downgraded to a weak tropical depression.
The typhoon killed at least 19 people, many of whom drowned, and left 15 missing in the northern Philippines. It also caused at least US$9 million in damage.<ref>http://reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/EKOI-6V58Y3?OpenDocument&rc=3&emid=TC-2006-000153-PHL</ref> 90% of the houses were damaged in a coastal town near where Cimaron made landfall.<ref>http://news.bostonherald.com/international/view.bg?articleid=164856</ref> In the aftermath of the storm's passage across the Philippines, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency contributed 2.5 million Swedish krona (US$350,000) to aid efforts.<ref>http://reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/HMYT-6V5P2H?OpenDocument&rc=3&emid=TC-2006-000153-PHL</ref>
[edit] Typhoon Chebi (Queenie)
An area of disturbed weather developed east of the Mariana Islands on October 31, and moved west-northwestward over the next week without any increase in organization due to an unfavorable environment, until November 6, when it encountered more favorable conditions, and the Japan Meteorological Agency declared it a tropical depression on November 8. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert on the system later that day, and PAGASA named the system Tropical Depression Queenie shortly after. The JTWC classified it as Tropical Depression 23W early on November 9. According to the JTWC, lack of equatorial outflow prevented rapid intensification of the system. Later that day at 12 p.m. UTC, the JMA upgraded it to a tropical storm named it Chebi, which means swallow in Korean. The JTWC and PAGASA both followed suit later that day. Early on November 10, the JMA upgraded Chebi to a severe tropical storm as it continued to move west towards the Philippines, following a similar track as Typhoon Cimaron earlier in the season.
Just hours later, the JMA upgraded Chebi from severe tropical storm with 10-minute sustained winds of 55 knots to a typhoon with winds of 95 knots, with a pressure decrease of 40 hPa over three hours. The JTWC followed suit, upping Chebi from a tropical storm with 1-minute sustained winds of 55 knots to a Category 4-equivalent typhoon at 9 a.m. UTC. PAGASA raised Public Storm Warning Signal 4 for three provinces in Luzon, making Chebi the second storm in as many weeks to force a Signal 4. After rapidly deepening, Chebi weakened as it approached the Philippines. It made its first landfall near Casiguran, Aurora early on November 11, crossed the Lingayen Gulf and its second landfall on Barangay Lucap, Alaminos City about 8 hours later.
Encountering dry air entrainment and increased vertical wind shear in the South China Sea, Chebi began to gradually weaken to a severe tropical storm on November 12. It continued to weaken, turning northwards towards Hainan, and was downgraded to a tropical storm the next day. On November 14, the JMA issued its last advisory on the dissipating tropical depression. The wind shear proved too strong for Chebi, and later the same day the JTWC issued its final warning. The remnants of Chebi made landfall on Hainan Island soon after.
[edit] Typhoon Durian (Reming)
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| Typhoon Durian (Reming) Super Typhoon 24W
| TY
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<tr><th colspan="2" align=center style="border-top:1px solid #AAAAAA; background: #d2d153;">Current storm status Typhoon (JMA)</th></tr><tr><th colspan="2" align=center style="border-top:1px solid #AAAAAA; background: #ffffcc;">Current storm status Category 1 typhoon (1-min mean)</th></tr>
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| As of:
| 0300 UTC December 4, 2006
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| Location:
| 12.0°N 111.1°E 130 nm ENE of Nha Trang, Vietnam
|
| Winds:
| 65 kt (120 km/h, 75 < |