4.6 Article

A 50-Year Tropical Cyclone Exposure Climatology in Southeast Asia

Journal

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021JD036301

Keywords

Tropical Cyclone; Landfall; Southeast Asia; Climatology; Exposure; ENSO

Funding

  1. Australian Government Endeavour Postgraduate scholarship
  2. UNSW scholarship (Int'l MOUs PTFS) [RSRE7073]

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The study found that approximately half of the Western North Pacific tropical cyclones make landfall in Southeast Asia, representing over 75% of the total landfalls in the region. While there was a slight upward trend in landfall frequency in the JTWC dataset, the number of landfall events decreased in the CMA and TOKYO datasets over the study period. There was a consistent northward shift in landfall locations over the 50-year period, with decreases in landfalls in the Philippines and Vietnam but increases in some South China areas.
In this study, the landfalling tropical cyclone (TC) exposure in Southeast Asia for a 50-year period from 1970 to 2019 is investigated relative to the total western North Pacific (WNP) climatology taking disparities in historical records into account. Long-term trends in landfalling TCs are analyzed and intercompared among the Regional Specialized Meteorological Center of Tokyo (TOKYO), China Meteorological Administration (CMA), Hong Kong Observatory (HKO), and Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) best track datasets. Interannual and intra-seasonal variations are further examined by sub-region and nation using JTWC records. Approximately half of the WNP TCs make landfall in Southeast Asia representing over 75% of the total WNP landfalls in all datasets. Over the study period, there is a slight upward trend in landfalling TC frequency in both the WNP and Southeast Asia in the JTWC dataset, while the number of landfall events has decreased in the CMA and TOKYO datasets. A consistent northward shift in landfalling locations over the 50-year period is found in all datasets such that landfalls have decreased in the Philippines, Vietnam, but increased in some South China areas. The TOKYO dataset alone suggests that landfalling TCs in South China have slowed down over the study period, which would increase rainfall and wind risks in their path if substantiated. Less TC landfalls occur in El Nino years with landfalling locations shifting northwestward over the Asian mainland, while landfalls are higher and more distributed in La Nina, and highest in Neutral years.

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