This afternoon, major meteorological agencies have given extremely high fixed strength. The intensity given by my country is above level 17, while the intensity given by the United States is 150 nautical miles per hour.

On October 30, typhoon Swan , located east of the Philippines, ushered in a violent outbreak. On the evening of October 30, its clear eye and neat convection from the satellite cloud map were enough to prove that it is very powerful at present. This afternoon, major meteorological agencies have given extremely high fixed strength. The intensity given by my country is above level 17 (65 meters/second), and the intensity given by the United States is 150 nautical miles per hour. In this way, typhoon swans have surpassed the Pacific God of the Northwest, Ampan in the North Indian Ocean and Harold in the Southern Hemisphere, becoming the world's strongest tropical cyclone in 2020. The swan will continue to strengthen.

But there is not only a swan in the Western Pacific, but in the southeast of the swan, Typhoon Aishani was pasted by the exhaust gas produced by Typhoon Swan and the structure turned into a ball of paste. Therefore, when Typhoon Swan has become super typhoon , Typhoon Aishani is just a tropical storm . However, the forecast of Central Meteorological Observatory believes that after typhoon swans go westward, the impact on typhoon Aishani will weaken, so typhoon Aishani will begin to increase significantly after November 1. The Central Meteorological Observatory believes that the strongest typhoon level may be enhanced on November 4.

But compared with the forecasts of 8 o'clock and 17 o'clock today, the Central Meteorological Observatory's path forecast for Typhoon Aishani was clearly adjusted westward. The forecast of 8 o'clock believes that Typhoon Aishani will move steadily to the northwest around November 4, gradually approaching the 20th degree north latitude line, but at 17 o'clock, the Central Meteorological Observatory's prediction believes that it will cross the 130th degree east longitude line around November 3 and begin to turn west instead of moving northwest.

If you compare it in the past and after, it can be seen that Typhoon Aishani's path prediction is obviously adjusted westward, and there are also characteristics of continuing to move westward in the future. The latest predictions of supercomputers point out that the biggest possibility of Typhoon Aishani is that like the previous typhoons, it will move westward near , the Philippine Islands, and will enter the South China Sea and approach the coastal areas of Vietnam and Hainan.

Of course, the general trend of the path is like this, but the small details are still worth examining. For example, whether Typhoon Aishani will land in my country is actually very uncertain. However, even if it enters the South China Sea but does not land in South China, its impact on the South China Sea is also worth paying attention to. From this perspective, my country's South China Sea should still be particularly vigilant about typhoon activities in the future.