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South-West Indian Ocean tropical cyclone

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South-West Indian Ocean tropical cyclone

Summary

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Satellite image of [[Cyclone Batsirai]], the strongest tropical cyclone to strike Madagascar since Cyclone Enawo in 2017.

In the south-west Indian Ocean, tropical cyclones form south of the equator and west of 90° E to the coast of Africa.

Warnings and nomenclature

In 1946, Réunion's first airstrip opened, then called Gillot, and now called Roland Garros Airport. In 1950, the first meteorological station on the island opened at the airport, operated by Météo-France (MFR). The agency began publishing annual reviews in the 1962–63 season. Each year, the Météo-France office (MFR) based on Réunion island issues warnings on tropical cyclones within the basin, which is defined as the waters of the Indian Ocean from the coast of Africa to 90° E, south of the equator. The agency issues the warnings as part of its role as a Regional Specialized Meteorological Center, designated as such in 1993 by the World Meteorological Organization. Intensities are estimated through the Dvorak technique, which utilizes images from satellites by the American National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The Joint Typhoon Warning Center – a joint United States Navy – United States Air Force task force – also issues tropical cyclone warnings for the region. Wind estimates from Météo-France and most other basins throughout the world are sustained over 10 minutes, while estimates from the United States–based Joint Typhoon Warning Center are sustained over 1 minute. 1-minute winds are about 1.12 times the amount of 10-minute winds.

If a tropical storm in the basin strengthens to attain 10 minute sustained winds of at least 118 km/h, the MFR classifies it as a tropical cyclone, equivalent to a hurricane or typhoon (a use of "tropical cyclone" which is more restrictive than the usual definition).

History of the basin

The first storm in the MFR database of the basin originated on January 11, 1848. In January 1960, the first named storm was Alix, and each subsequent year had a list of storm names. Beginning in 1967, satellites helped locate cyclones in the basin, and in the following year, the MFR began estimating storm intensities from the satellite images. By 1977, the agency was using the Dvorak technique on an unofficial basis, but officially adopted it in 1981. Originally, the basin only extended to 80° E, and while it was extended eastward to the current 90° E, a lack of satellite imagery initially made data uncertain east of 80° E. The World Meteorological Organization designated the MFR as a Regional Tropical Cyclones Advisory Centre in 1988, and upgraded it to a Regional Specialized Meteorological Center in 1993. In May 1998, two Europe-based Meteosat satellites began providing complete coverage of the basin. On July 1, 2002, the MFR shifted the cyclone year to begin on this date and end on June 30 of the following year; previously, the cyclone year began on August 1 and ended on the subsequent July 31. In 2003, the MFR extended their area of warning responsibility to 40°S, having previously been limited to 30°S. During 2011, MFR started a reanalysis project of all tropical systems between 1978 and 1998, with methods such as a Dvorak technique reanalysis and use of microwave imagery. Preliminary results from this reanalysis project include correcting an increasing trend in the number of very intense tropical cyclones in the basin since 1978. This also revealed a seemingly systematic underestimation of tropical cyclone intensities in the past.

Statistics

From the 1980–81 to the 2010–11 season, there was an average of 9.3 tropical storms each year in the basin. A tropical storm has 10-minute winds of at least 65 km/h. There are an average of five storms that become tropical cyclones, which have 10-minute winds of at least 120 km/h. As of 2002, there was an average of 54 days when tropical systems were active in the basin, of which 20 had tropical cyclones active, or a system with winds of over 120 km/h. The median start date for the season was November 17, and the median end date was April 20.

Climatology

Tracks of storms in the basin from 1980 to 2005

Generally, the monsoon does not cross into the Mozambique Channel until December; as a result, storms rarely form there before that time. From 1948 to 2010, 94 tropical systems developed in the small body of water, of which about half made landfall. Occasionally, small storms form in the Mozambique Channel that resemble Mediterranean tropical cyclones or storms in the northeastern Atlantic Ocean; these systems are well-organized but have weaker convection than typical tropical cyclones, and originate over sea surface temperatures cooler than 26 C. A survey in 2004 conducted by weather expert Gary Padgett found meteorologists split whether these storms should be classified as tropical or subtropical.

In an average year, ten tropical depressions or storms strike Madagascar, and most generally do not cause much damage. Occasionally, storms or their remnants enter the interior of southeastern Africa, bringing heavy rainfall to Zimbabwe.

Seasons

{{ #invoke:Chartbar chartheight = 500width = 600stack = 1group 1 = 3 : 1 : 4 : 2 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 2group 2 = 18 : 17 : 19 : 5 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 8 : 10group 3 = 14 : 18 : 4 : 7 : 3 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 4 : 8group 4 = 16 : 17 : 12 : 4 : 2 : 0 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 2 : 8 : 8group 5 = 14 : 15 : 10 : 8 : 2 : 2 : 1 : 0 : 5 : 3 : 5 : 9group 6 = 9 : 10 : 7 : 2 : 1 : 1 : 2 : 2 : 1 : 7 : 7 : 7group 7 = 15 : 10 : 7 : 5 : 2 : 1 : 1 : 3 : 5 : 5 : 1 : 6group names = Very intense tropical cyclone : Intense tropical cyclone : Tropical cyclone : Severe tropical storm : Moderate tropical storm : Tropical depression : Tropical disturbancecolors = #A188FC : #FF738A : #FFD98C : #C0FFC0 : #4DFFFF : #6EC1EA : #1591DEx legends = Jan : Feb : Mar : Apr : May : Jun : Jul : Aug : Sep : Oct : Nov : Dec

Before 1900

Main article: List of South-West Indian Ocean cyclones before 1900

1900–1950

Main article: 1900–1950 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone seasons

1950–1959

Main article: 1950s South-West Indian Ocean cyclone seasons

1959

SeasonTDTCStrongest
stormDeathsDamage
USDNotes and
References
1959–196068Carol48Features the first officially named tropical cyclone 'Alix'

1960s

SeasonTDTCStrongest
stormDeathsDamage
USDNotes and
References
1960–196161Doris
1961–1962145Daisy
Maud
1962–1963104Delia
1963–1964124Giselle
1964–1965141Freda
1965–1966175Ivy3
1966–1967132Gilberte
1967–196884Georgette
Janine38
1968–196984Dany
Helene82
1969–1970138Jane30

1970s

SeasonTDMTSTCITCVITCStrongest
stormDeathsDamage
USDNotes and
References
1970–19711611840Maggie-Muriel32
1971–197297210Fabienne7
1972–19731311421Lydie11
1973–197487100Deidre-Delinda
1974–1975106200Gervaise9
1975–197686110Terry-Danae
1976–197798310Jack-Io301
1977–19781412210Aurore2
1978–1979106420Celine74
1979–19801111420Viola-Claudette30

1980s

SeasonTDMTSTCITCStrongest
stormDeathsDamage
USDNotes and
References
1980–81121032Florine
1981–82141052Chris-Damia100$250 million
1982–836300Bemany and Elinah33$23 millionLeast active season on record, tied with the 2010–11 season.
1983–84141144Andry, Bakoly, Annette-Jaminy, and Kamisy356$496 million
1984–859910Helisaonina0Unknown
1985–86131351Erinesta99$150 million
1986–8710810Daodo10$2 million
1987–88111141Gasitao100$10 million
1988–89121160Leon-Hanitra and Krissy11$217 million
1989–909951Walter-Gregoara46$1.5 million
110953411Chris-Damia755'''≥{{ntsp1149500000$}}'''

1990s

SeasonTDMTSTCITCVITCStrongest
stormDeathsDamage
USDNotes and
References
1990–91117300Bella88
1991–921411310Harriet-Heather2
1992–931811420Edwina2040mphkm/horder=flipround=5abbr=on}}.
1993–941814840Geralda558
1994–952011530Marlenetitle=Cyclone Season 1994–1995url=http://www.meteo.fr/temps/domtom/La_Reunion/webcmrs9.0/anglais/archives/publications/saisons_cycloniques/index19941995.htmlauthor=RSMC La Reunion Tropical Cyclone Centrepublisher=MeteoFranceaccess-date=December 20, 2012}}
1995–962111630Bonita11title=Cyclone Season 1995–1996url=http://www.meteo.fr/temps/domtom/La_Reunion/webcmrs9.0/anglais/archives/publications/saisons_cycloniques/index19951996.htmlauthor=RSMC La Reunion Tropical Cyclone Centrepublisher=Meteo-Franceaccess-date=December 20, 2012}}
1996–972112530Daniella311{{ntsp50000000$}}
1997–98165100Anacelle88
1998–99146220Evrina2
1999–00149431Hudah1,073{{ntsp800000000$}}
1679741211Hudah2,153'''≥{{ntsp850000000$}}'''

2000s

SeasonTDMTSTCITCVITCStrongest
stormDeathsDamage
USDNotes and
References
2000–01116420Ando4title=Cyclone Season 2000–2001url=http://www.meteo.fr/temps/domtom/La_Reunion/webcmrs9.0/anglais/archives/publications/saisons_cycloniques/index20002001.htmlauthor=RSMC La Reunion Tropical Cyclone Centrepublisher=Meteo-Franceaccess-date=November 26, 2012}}
2001–021511951Hary52{{ntsp287180000$}}
2002–031412730Kalunde169{{ntsp6700000$}}
2003–041510531Gafilo396{{ntsp250000000$}}
2004–051810431Juliet253
2005–06136320Carina75title=Cyclone Season 2005–2006url=http://www.meteo.fr/temps/domtom/La_Reunion/webcmrs9.0/anglais/archives/publications/saisons_cycloniques/index20052006.htmlauthor=RSMC La Reunion Tropical Cyclone Centrepublisher=Meteo-Franceaccess-date=December 20, 2012}}
2006–071510760Dora and Favio188{{ntsp337000000$}}
2007–081513640Hondo123{{ntsp38050000$}}
2008–091210220Fanele and Gael30pages=5–8url=http://www.wmo.int/pages/prog/www/tcp/documents/RAITCC-19FinalReport_En.pdftype=Final Reportauthor=RA I Tropical Cyclone Committee for the South-West Indian Oceantitle=RA I Tropical Cyclone Committee for the South-West Indian Ocean Nineteenth Sessionpublisher=World Meteorological Organisationaccess-date=December 20, 2012date=August 3, 2011}}
2009–10169541Edzani40access-date=July 25, 2012year=1997–2011title=Monthly Global Tropical Cyclone Summariesurl=http://www.australiasevereweather.com/cyclones/tropical_cyclone_summaries_track_data.htmauthor=Padgett, Garyarchive-date=February 18, 2020url-status=livearchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200218084422/http://australiasevereweather.com/cyclones/tropical_cyclone_summaries_track_data.htm}} Alt URL
1449752344Gafilo1,339'''≥{{ntsp918800000$}}'''

2010s

SeasonTDMTSTCITCVITCStrongest
stormDeathsDamage
USDNotes and
References
2010–1193200Bingiza34Least active season on record, tied with the 1982–83 season.
2011–121410320Funso164
2012–131110730Felleng35{{ntsp46000000$}}
2013–141511552Hellen11{{ntsp89200000$}}
2014–151411432Bansi111{{ntsp46400000$}}
2015–1688331Fantala13{{ntsp4500000$}}
2016–1775310Enawo341{{ntsp136500000$}}
2017–1898630Cebile108{{ntsp38200000$}}
2018–1915151190Kenneth1,672≥{{ntsp3646000000$}}
2019–201210631Ambali45{{ntsp25000000$}}
1128949326Fantala2,244'''≥{{ntsp2696820000$}}'''

2020s

SeasonTDMTSTCITCVITCStrongest
stormDeathsDamage
USDNotes and
References
2020–211612722Faraji
Habana56$90.1 millionFeatures two very intense tropical cyclones named in the basin.
Record third consecutive season for a storm to develop before the official start (Alicia).
2021–221312550Batsirai376$380 millionLatest start to an SWIO season.
2022–23109532Darian1,483$1.55 billionFeatures two very intense tropical cyclones named in the Australian Region.
Features Freddy, the longest lasting tropical cyclone ever recorded.
Third deadliest season.
Third costliest season.
2023–241210720Djoungou25$536 millionFeatures Belal, the first to make landfall over Réunion since Hondo in 2008, and the strongest to strike the island since Firinga in 1989.
2024–251513961Vince189+$4.1 billionFeatures Bheki, the most intense off-season tropical cyclone since Beni in 2003.
Features Chido, the strongest system to ever make landfall on Mayotte since records began.
Features Kanto, the first officially named subtropical storm in basin history.
Costliest South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season on record.
Tied as the third-busiest season in the South-West Indian Ocean.
2025–2676220Dudzai0NoneFeatures a Tropical Depression in the month of July.
Features three pre-season storms Awo, Blossom, and Chenge, which formed in August, September, and October, respectively.
Awo was the first named storm recorded in August since Aline in 1960.
685733195Darian2,425$8.156 billion

Notes

References

References

  1. Philippe Caroff. (June 2011). "Operational procedures of TC satellite analysis at RSMC La Reunion". World Meteorological Organization.
  2. "Aéroport de la Réunion Roland Garros".
  3. Isabelle Mayer Jouanjean. (2011). "Lîle de La Réunion sous l'œil du cyclone au XXéme siécle". Université de la Réunion.
  4. "Annual Tropical Cyclone Report". Joint Typhoon Warning Center.
  5. Chris Landsea. (2006-04-21). "Subject: D4) What does "maximum sustained wind" mean? How does it relate to gusts in tropical cyclones?". Hurricane Research Division.
  6. Chris Landsea. (2001-07-15). "Subject: A1) What is a hurricane, typhoon, or tropical cyclone?". Hurricane Research Division.
  7. Philippe Caroff. (October 23, 2015). "Review of recent (2012-2015) main activities and achievements at RSMC La Reunion". World Meteorological Organization.
  8. Chris Landsea. (2014-05-01). "Subject: E10) What are the average, most, and least tropical cyclones occurring in each basin?". Hurricane Research Division.
  9. "Cyclone Season 2001–2002". Meteo-France.
  10. Corene J. Matyas. (2014-04-07). "Tropical cyclone formation and motion in the Mozambique Channel". International Journal of Climatology.
  11. "June 2004 Monthly Global Tropical Cyclone Summary". Gary Padgett.
  12. (1992-05-11). "Cyclone Rehabilitation Project". World Bank.
  13. A. Mhizha. (2012-01-23). "Preliminary Water Resources Assessment for the Limpopo River Basin". University of Zimbabwe.
  14. RSMC La Reunion Tropical Cyclone Centre. "Cyclone Season 1992–1993". Meteo-France.
  15. RSMC La Reunion Tropical Cyclone Centre. "Cyclone Season 1994–1995". MeteoFrance.
  16. RSMC La Reunion Tropical Cyclone Centre. "Cyclone Season 1995–1996". Meteo-France.
  17. RSMC La Reunion Tropical Cyclone Centre. "Cyclone Season 1999–2000". Meteo-France.
  18. RSMC La Reunion Tropical Cyclone Centre. "Cyclone Season 2000–2001". Meteo-France.
  19. RSMC La Reunion Tropical Cyclone Centre. "Cyclone Season 2001–2002". Meteo-France.
  20. RSMC La Reunion Tropical Cyclone Centre. "Cyclone Season 2003–2004". Meteo-France.
  21. RA I Tropical Cyclone Committee for the South-West Indian Ocean. (2006-06-16). "RA I Tropical Cyclone Committee for the South-West Indian Ocean Seventeenth Session". World Meteorological Organisation.
  22. RSMC La Reunion Tropical Cyclone Centre. "Cyclone Season 2005–2006". Meteo-France.
  23. RA I Tropical Cyclone Committee for the South-West Indian Ocean. (2010-09-15). "RA I Tropical Cyclone Committee for the South-West Indian Ocean Eighteenth Session". World Meteorological Organisation.
  24. RA I Tropical Cyclone Committee for the South-West Indian Ocean. (August 3, 2011). "RA I Tropical Cyclone Committee for the South-West Indian Ocean Nineteenth Session". World Meteorological Organisation.
  25. Padgett, Gary. (1997–2011). "Monthly Global Tropical Cyclone Summaries".
  26. RA I Tropical Cyclone Committee for the South-West Indian Ocean. (December 3, 2012). "RA I Tropical Cyclone Committee for the South-West Indian Ocean Twentieth Session". World Meteorological Organisation.
  27. [http://www.seychellesnewsagency.com/articles/5175/.+million+in+damages+from+cyclone+that+hit+remote+Seychellois+island,+World+Bank+says $4.5 million in damages from cyclone that hit remote Seychellois island, World Bank says (Seychelles News Agency, May 17, 2016)]
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