Why Fewer Typhoons Are Reaching Normally Hard-Hit Parts of Asia

Why Fewer Typhoons Are Reaching Normally Hard-Hit Parts of Asia

In Taiwan, a tropical storm killed two people in August and a low-strength typhoon brushed the northeast coast just over a month later. Normally the western Pacific island gets hit head on by three to four typhoons ever year from June through October. Typhoons, which pack higher winds than other tropical storms, often kill five to 10 people per event and destroy infrastructure, VOA news reports.

But for the past three years Taiwan and the Philippines, an archipelago to its south, have missed their historical average typhoon counts because of high water temperatures over the mid-Pacific where typhoons originate and shifts in upper-atmosphere winds, meteorologists believe.

The Philippines can get up to 20 of the raging storms per year. The systems called cyclones and hurricanes in other parts of the world bring winds strong enough to blow down trees and rainfall that can quickly turn streets into rivers. They typically prompt mass evacuations and shut down transportation including flights.

“General bias is in the Indian Ocean and in the Pacific has been for waters to be warmer than normal and global warming may have something to do with that,” according to  Jason Nicholls, senior meteorologist with American forecasting service AccuWeather.

Warmer waters

Ocean temperatures in the central and eastern Pacific Ocean have heated up since 2017, causing typhoons to form relatively far from Taiwan and the Philippines that lie to the west, Nicholls said.

Upper-level steering winds ultimately push the storms north, eventually affecting Japan, South Korea and eastern China, he said. “They have more time to get picked up and curved off to the north and northeast,” Nicholls said.

Western Pacific waters are relatively cool this year, he said, meaning fewer storms form near the east coasts of Taiwan or the Philippines.  

Warm waters remain around the equator near the international dateline, he said. In the 1980s and 1990s waters around the Pacific and Indian oceans were cooler “as a general rule.”

Asia’s deadliest storms each year, including the  2013 super-typhoon that killed 6,340, often reach the Philippines, a largely impoverished country that has struggled historically to cope. No full-blown typhoons, only weaker tropical storms, have made landfall there to date this year.

Heading north

Most of the 21 typhoons in Asia this year so far reached Japan, South Korea and China because of the northbound trend. The most severe, Typhoon Hagibis, killed 80 people in eastern Japan earlier this month.

“If in a situation where Pacific Ocean high pressure is weak and higher north, before reaching Taiwan typhoons will follow the high pressure northward and reach Japan,” said Chen Meng-shih, long-range forecast section chief with Taiwan’s Central Weather Bureau.

Warming ocean temperatures will “drive cyclonic storm activity,” the advocacy group Union of Concerned Scientists said in a December 2018 report. Other scientific reports say ocean temperatures will make the storms stronger.

Ocean temperatures are going up because the water absorbs heat from “increased concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere”, mainly from fossil fuel consumption, the civic group International Union for Conservation of Nature says.

Too wet or not wet enough?

Lack of typhoons has spared crops, infrastructure and human lives. Typhoon Mitag, Taiwan’s biggest storm of 2019, caused just $60,485 in crop damage, the government’s Council of Agriculture found. Mitag passed east of the island on October 1.

In a more typical case, Typhoon Soudelor killed six people, cancelled 300 flights and cost farmers $9.42 million in Taiwan.

In the Philippines, dry weather has accelerated municipal-level infrastructure projects that heavy rainfall could otherwise delay, said Jonathan Ravelas, chief market strategist with Banco de Oro UniBank in metro Manila. The government is in the midst of a 5-year, $169 billion infrastructure renewal drive to attract investment.

But the dearth of typhoons has cut valuable rainfall too, Ravelas said. Parts of Metro Manila have rationed water this year partly for lack of precipitation.

“You’d rather have more rains but on the other side you have lots of calamities,” he said. “It’s a double-edged sword, so to speak.”