Typhoon naming is composed of 10 names provided by each of the 14 affected member countries in the Asia-Pacific region to form a typhoon naming list, which is recycled in order. Once a typhoon is too evil or too individual, it will be removed from the naming list, and the member

2024/12/3023:29:33 hotcomm 1548

Where did the typhoon get its name? Typhoon naming is a typhoon naming table composed of 10 names provided by each of the 14 affected member states (regions) in the Asia-Pacific region, which are recycled in order. The name

Typhoon naming is composed of 10 names provided by each of the 14 affected member countries in the Asia-Pacific region to form a typhoon naming list, which is recycled in order. Once a typhoon is too evil or too individual, it will be removed from the naming list, and the member  - DayDayNews

on the typhoon naming list is not "life-long". Once a typhoon is mischievous or too individual, it will be removed from the naming list, and the member country will be provided with this name, and a new name will be resubmitted to fill the vacancy.

Typhoons that were delisted in those years

Typhoon No. 13 in 2017 " Hato"

Active time: August 20-August 24

Peak intensity: 48m/s, 940hPa

Landing location: Zhuhai City, Guangdong Province

except Reason for delisting: causing 24 deaths and economic losses of US$6.82 billion

Typhoon No. 26 "Kai Tak" in 2017

Active time: December 14-December 22

Peak intensity: 23m/s, 990hPa

Reason for delisting: causing 80 people Casualties, economic losses $75 million

Typhoon No. 27 "Libra" in 2017

Active time: December 21 - December 26

Peak intensity: 38m/s, 965h Pa

Reason for delisting: Caused 335 casualties and economic losses of US$42.4 million

Typhoon No. 14 in 2016 "Mo Randy”

active time: September 10th - September 15th

peak intensity: 70m/s, 900h Pa

landing location: Xiamen City, Fujian Province

replacement name: Niyatu

reason for delisting: causing 29 deaths, 49 injuries, 18 People were missing and the economic losses were approximately US$2.5631 billion.

Typhoon No. 21 in 2016 " Sarika "

Active time: October 13th - October 19th

Peak intensity: 55m/s, 930h Pa

Replacement name: Tris

Reason for delisting: Caused economic loss of at least 5 billion yuan , at least 30 people died, Philippines and Vietnam were severely affected, and caused floods when it landed in Vietnam.

Typhoon No. 22 "Haima" in 2016

Active time: October 15th - October 21st

Peak intensity: 68m/s, 905hPa

Landing location: Landing first Philippines, then landed in Shanwei City, Guangdong Province

Alternative name: Mulan

Reason for delisting: Landing in the Philippines caused at least 8 deaths, causing 1.899 million people to be affected in my country, 114,000 people to be relocated urgently, and direct economic losses of nearly 5 billion yuan.

Typhoon No. 26 "Lotan" in 2016

Active time: December 22-December 28

Peak intensity: 65m/s, 900hPa

Replacement name: Xuanlanno

Reason for delisting: Caused at least 6 deaths and 18 deaths in the Philippines Heavy rainfall caused flooding, flooding local roads and farms, and damaging houses and boats.

Typhoon No. 13 in 2015 " Sudiro "

Active time: July 30 - August 11

Peak intensity: 68m/s, 905hPa

Landing location: First landed in Hualien, Taiwan, then Putian, Fujian Province

Alternative name: Shader

Reason for delisting: "Sudiluo" landed in Taiwan. Heavy rains and strong winds caused widespread power supply interruptions and at least 8 deaths. In eastern China, at least 26 people were killed in floods and landslides caused by once-in-a-century rainfall.

Typhoon No. 22 "Rainbow" in 2015

Active time: October 2 - October 5

Peak intensity: 52m/s, 935h Pa

Landing location: Zhanjiang City, Guangdong Province

Replacement name: Shuliji

Reason for delisting: "Rainbow" is It was the strongest typhoon to land in Guangdong Province in October since meteorological records began. "Rainbow" caused a total of 23 people to die and go missing, causing direct economic losses of more than 23 billion yuan.

Typhoon No. 24 "Jujue" in 2015

Active time: October 13 - October 20

Peak intensity: 55m/s, 935h Pa

Alternative name: Little Bear

Reason for delisting: "Jujue" lingered around the Philippines Luzon and stayed for a long time. The continuous rainfall caused floods and landslides, causing a total of 51 deaths and missing people, and economic losses of approximately 9.91 billion Philippine pesos .

2015 Typhoon No. 27 "Jasmine"

Active time: December 11-December 17

Peak intensity: 55m/s, 930hPa

Replacement name: Chapaca

Reason for delisting: "Jasmine" swept across the central Philippines, causing severe The floods left 45 people dead and missing, with economic losses exceeding 935 million Philippine pesos, and the entire Philippines entered a "state of disaster."

Typhoon No. 9 in 2014 " Rammasun"

Active time: July 12-July 20

Peak intensity: 72m/s, 888h Pa

Replacement name: Baro

Landing location: Three landfalls, Wenchang, Hainan, Reason for delisting Guangdong Xuwen and Guangxi

: the strongest typhoon to land in China since 1949. "Ramason" experienced sharp offshore intensification twice before passing through the central Philippines and Hainan Province of China, causing a total of at least 56 deaths, 20 missing people, and direct economic losses of more than 38.5 billion yuan.

Typhoon No. 01 "Qingsong" in 2013

Active time: January 3 - January 8

Peak intensity: 23m/s, 992h Pa

Replacement name: Hibari

Reason for delisting: The English pronunciation of the name "Sonamu" and the pronunciation of tsunami "Tsunami" "The resemblance caused panic among Malaysia coastal residents.

Typhoon No. 11 "Ute" in 2013

Active time: August 9th - August 15th

Peak intensity: 60m/s, 925h Pa

Replacement name: Bailijia

Landing location: First land in the Philippines, then Reasons for delisting after landing in Yangjiang, Guangdong: "Ute" brought record heavy rainfall to Guangdong. The local precipitation in Huizhou exceeded 1,000 mm. Severe floods occurred in the Chaoshan area. The Beijing-Guangzhou line was interrupted, at least 52 people Died or missing in disasters caused by "Ute". In addition, "Ute" killed at least 11 people in the Philippines.

Typhoon No. 23 "Fit" in 2013

Active time: September 30-October 7

Peak intensity: 45m/s, 945hPa

Landfall location: Fuding, Fujian

Replacement name: Muen

Reason for delisting: Meteorological records Since then, tropical cyclone has caused the most heavy economic losses in Zhejiang. The single-day rainfall records of many national weather stations in Zhejiang were refreshed. Yuyao City was besieged by floods for several days, and the city was completely paralyzed.

Typhoon No. 30 in 2013 " Haiyan "

Active time: November 4th - November 11th

Peak intensity: 78m/s, 890h Pa

Replacement name: Bailu

Reason for delisting: The world's strongest tropical storm since meteorological records began One of the cyclones, the tropical cyclone with the strongest landfall intensity. Philippine officials said that "Haiyan" caused at least 6,201 deaths and 1,785 missing people. Unofficial data also stated that the number of dead and missing people was far higher than the above figures. The province of Leyte in the Philippines was hit hard by "Haiyan". Its capital city, Tacloban, was in a mess after the typhoon passed through, with desolation everywhere, as if a tsunami had occurred.

Typhoon No. 8 "Vicente" in 2012

Active time: July 21-July 24

Peak intensity: 45m/s, 960hPa

Replacement name: Rann

Reason for delisting: Same name as Northeast Pacific hurricane

2012 24 Typhoon "Baoxia"

Active time: November 27 - December 9

Peak intensity: 60m/s, 920h Pa

Alternative name: Ambi

Reason for delisting: The lowest latitude Category 5 typhoon in history, affecting the densely populated Mindanao area, causing the Philippines A total of 1,067 people died nationwide and 834 people were missing.

Typhoon No. 21 "Skyhawk" in 2011

Active time: December 15-December 19

Peak intensity: 25m/s, 990hPa

Replacement name: Hato

Reason for delisting: After "Skyhawk" made landfall in Mindanao, southern Philippines , flash floods, mudslides, and landslides followed one after another, resulting in 1,257 deaths and 85 missing.

Typhoon No. 11 in 2010 " Fan Yabi "

Active time: September 15th - September 20th

Peak intensity: 52m/s, 935hPa

Replacement name: 雷伊

Reason for delisting: "Fanyabi" triggered a rare short-term heavy rainfall in Guangdong Province in recent years. On September 21, the 12-hour precipitation at multiple sites exceeded the once-in-a-century event. The heavy rainfall caused flash floods and debris flow disasters. As a result, 100 people died and 61 people disappeared in Guangdong Province.In addition, "Van Yabi" also caused certain disasters in Taiwan. "Fanyapi" was the replacement name after Typhoon "Unna" was removed from the list in 2004. This is the first time that a replacement name has been removed

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