Super Typhoon Haishen bombed into a mighty category 4 storm with 155 mph winds on Thursday, becoming Earth’s third-strongest storm of 2020. Haishen is expected to hit South Korea on Sunday, making the third landfalling typhoon in Korea (including both North Korea and South Korea) in a two-week period.
On August 27, Typhoon Bavi made landfall over North Pyongan Province, North Korea, as a minimal category 1 typhoon with 75 mph winds. On September 2, Typhoon Maysak made landfall as a category 2 storm with 100 mph winds just west of Busan, South Korea’s second-largest city and the world’s fifth-largest port.
Haishen put on an impressive display of rapid intensification on Thursday, strengthening in 24 hours from a low-end category 3 storm with 115 mph winds to a 155-mph super typhoon with a central pressure of 915 mb by 2 a.m. EDT Friday, according to the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC). Haishen maintained that intensity through the 11 a.m. EDT Friday advisory, when the typhoon was located over the record- to near-record warm waters about 700 miles south of Japan, heading northwest at 10 mph towards Korea. Haishen was already bringing heavy rains to the islands south of mainland Japan, as seen on Japanese radar.
Only two storms so far in 2020 have been stronger than Haishen: category 5 Tropical Cyclone Harold in the Southeast Pacific, which peaked with 165 mph winds and a pressure of 912 mb on April 6, and category 5 Tropical Cyclone Amphan, which peaked with 160 mph winds and a pressure of 907 mb on May 18 in the North Indian Ocean.

Forecast for Haishen
Haishen likely has hit its peak intensity, with the JTWC forecast calling for slow weakening to begin on Saturday morning. Haishen will be over record- to near-record warm ocean waters of 30 – 31 degrees Celsius (86 – 88°F) through Saturday. But it will cross over the cold wake left by Typhoon Maysak, to the south of Korea, by Sunday morning, perhaps inducing more rapid weakening. Haishen is expected to pass near the Japanese island of Amami Oshima, located about 100 miles northeast of Okinawa, around 2 a.m. EDT Sunday. Storm chaser James Reynolds is on Amami Oshima (population 73,000), and will be sending reports via Twitter (https://twitter.com/EarthUncutTV).

JTWC predicts that Haishen will hit South Korea on Sunday afternoon (U.S. EDT) as a weakening category 3 or category 2 storm. The typhoon likely will bring significant wind and storm surge damage to the coast. Even if Haishen passes far enough west of Busan to spare the city its strongest winds, the storm’s broad, powerful circulation likely will push a substantial storm surge toward the Busan area, where the geography is particularly prone to surge impacts.
What’s more, typhoons appear to be delivering larger storm surges to the Busan area even after taking into account sea-level rise caused by climate change. A 2016 study in the Journal of Coastal Research led by Sang Myeong Oh and co-authors found that typhoon landfalls from 1962 to 2014 drove a seven-inch increase in the annual maximum surge height in Busan, a rate of increase about 50% higher than the local trend in mean sea-level rise. The researchers attributed the higher surges to stronger typhoons resulting from increasing sea surface temperatures and decreasing wind shear.
It appears that Typhoon Maysak’s storm surge on September 2 in Busan was not severe, possibly because Maysak’s angle of approach was somewhat oblique (from the south-southwest) and because Maysak’s eastern eyewall and its strong onshore winds ended up reaching the coast east of the metropolitan area. In contrast, Haishen is expected to strike west of Busan, and the typhoon’s more perpendicular angle of approach would suggest more storm surge in Busan.
Another serious concern is the widespread four-to-eight inches of rain Haishen is expected to dump over both North Korea and South Korea. These rains will be falling atop ground soaked, due to South Korea’s second wettest monsoon season on record and the passage of Typhoon Bevi and Typhoon Maysak.

An unprecedented battering for Korea
According to NOAA’s historical hurricanes database, Korea between 1945 and 2019 has not been hit by three typhoons (sustained winds of at least 74 mph) in one year, so Typhoon Haishen’s landfall will be historic. The NOAA database lists 14 typhoons that have passed over South Korea prior to 2020 – 10 at category 1 strength, three category 2s and one category 3. Only three typhoons passed over North Korea prior to 2020, all minimal category 1 storms with 75 mph winds.
Typhoon Maysak is being blamed for two deaths in South Korea and three in Russia. In addition, 41 crew members of a livestock ship are missing after their ship sank in the typhoon. Two crew members have been rescued.
Damage reports from North Korea from Typhoon Bavi’s landfall there are hard to come by, but there are reports that the typhoon caused major flooding in portions of the secretive nation.
Four areas in the Atlantic to watch
In the Atlantic, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) was still issuing advisories for Tropical Depression Omar on Friday. Omar was located in the remote North Atlantic in the waters between Bermuda and Newfoundland, Canada, and it is not a threat to any land areas. Omar will likely dissipate by Saturday.
The 2 p.m. EDT Friday Tropical Weather Outlook from NHC was a busy one, highlighting three disturbances with the potential to develop into tropical cyclones. NHC designated a tropical wave near 11°N, 38°W as 91L. Satellite images showed 91L had changed little since Thursday, with an elongated surface circulation and a modest amount of heavy thunderstorm activity that was being hampered by dry air and high wind shear.

That shear and dry air are predicted to abate by Monday, giving 91L the potential to develop into a tropical depression. NHC gave 91L two-day and five-day odds of development of 20% and 30%, respectively. This system is predicted to meander in the central tropical Atlantic at speeds of around five mph over the coming five days, and has modest support for development from the top three models for predicting tropical cyclone genesis.
A large and complex tropical wave just west of the Cabo Verde Islands, designated 92L by NHC on Friday afternoon, was headed west to west-northwest at roughly 15 mph. Satellite images showed the wave had changed little since Thursday, with a modest amount of poorly organized heavy thunderstorm activity, but a good deal of spin. The system was at the edge of a large area of dry air associated with the Saharan Air Layer, and the dry air may interfere with development through the weekend. When the wave reaches the central Atlantic on Monday and Tuesday, passing to the north of 91L, it is expected to find a moister atmosphere with low-to-moderate wind shear, increasing chances of development. Models give this wave strong support for development. NHC gave the wave two-day and five-day odds of formation of 40% and 80%, respectively. An interaction with 91L may occur, making the future tracks of both of these disturbances difficult to predict.
A new tropical wave will emerge from the coast of Africa on Sunday, and it is predicted to head west to west-northwest at roughly 15 mph through the Cabo Verde Islands early next week. This wave has strong model support for developing into a tropical depression by Wednesday. NHC gave it two-day and five-day odds of formation of 0% and 60%, respectively.
The next name on the Atlantic list of storms is Paulette. The earliest sixteenth named storm on record for the Atlantic is Philippe from September 17, 2005. Including Paulette, only six more names remain on the 2020 Atlantic list before NHC will have to turn to the Greek alphabet, a last resort that’s been used only in 2005. That unforgettable year produced tropical storms Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, Epsilon, and – on December 30 – Zeta.
With the Labor Day weekend at hand, there will be no new post here on the tropics until Sunday, September 6, at the earliest.
Bob Henson contributed to this post.
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Posted on September 4, 2020 (3:08pm EDT).
Japan Meteorological Agency
Tropical Cyclone Advisory #57 – 15:00 PM JST September 7 2020
TYPHOON HAISHEN (T2010)
=================================================
Sea of Japan
At 6:00 AM UTC, Typhoon Haishen (970 hPa) located at 38.4N 129.3E has 10 minute sustained winds of 65 knots with gusts of 95 knots. The cyclone is reported as moving north at 26 knots.
Storm Force Winds
=================
90 nm from the center
Gale Force Winds
=================
325 nm from the center in eastern quadrant
270 nm from the center in western quadrant
Dvorak Intensity: T4.0-
Forecast and Intensity
=======================
24 HRS: 45.2N 127.9E – Extratropical Low over land northeastern China
https://kymkemp.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/G17_sector_psw_GEOCOLOR_24fr_20200906-1357.gif
Japan Meteorological Agency
Tropical Cyclone Advisory #56 – 12:00 PM JST September 7 2020
TYPHOON HAISHEN (T2010)
=================================================
Sea of Japan
At 3:00 AM UTC, Typhoon Haishen (960 hPa) located at 37.2N 129.6E has 10 minute sustained winds of 70 knots with gusts of 100 knots. The cyclone is reported as moving north at 26 knots.
Storm Force Winds
=================
150 nm from the center in eastern quadrant
90 nm from the center in western quadrant
Gale Force Winds
=================
375 nm from the center in eastern quadrant
240 nm from the center in western quadrant
https://yaleclimateconnections.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Screenshot_2020-09-07-%E6%B0%97%E8%B1%A1%E5%BA%81-%E5%8F%B0%E9%A2%A8%E6%83%85%E5%A0%B1-1599450875.9179.png
track after it made landfall over South Korea. System is expected to make landfall over North Korea later today.
Got a special update up at my infohurricanes site for newly formed TD17 and 93L. Thinking both will become hurricanes, but I think 93L will end up being the stronger of the two systems as TD17 may run into some shear by 72 hours.
Click for animation. It’s swirly out there.
Tropical Depression 17
https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/storm_graphics/AT17/refresh/AL172020_5day_cone_no_line_and_wind+png/023357_5day_cone_no_line_and_wind.png
TD17 now in the Atlantic….tried to post an animation but it says that my size is too large……basin…..
https://cdn.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/GOES16/ABI/SECTOR/taw/09/20202510250_GOES16-ABI-taw-09-900×540.jpg
I just gotta break in with this much too close Mt. Wilson HPWREN webcam image of the Mt.Wilson fire:
http://hpwren.ucsd.edu/cameras/
great pix!
500mb level winds…..
850mb level winds…..
Evening everyone…..surface winds on 92L still seem to be not fully wrapped around center (appears elongated)…..easterly winds though getting stronger…..93L seems to have better center spin at the surface but much lighter winds currently…..
Japan Meteorological Agency
Tropical Cyclone Advisory #55 – 9:00 AM JST September 7 2020
TYPHOON HAISHEN (T2010)
=================================================
Over land Korean Peninsula (South Korea)
At 0:00 AM UTC, Typhoon Haishen (955 hPa) located at 35.2N 129.2E has 10 minute sustained winds of 75 knots with gusts of 105 knots. The cyclone is reported as moving north at 21 knots.
Storm Force Winds
=================
150 nm from the center in eastern quadrant
90 nm from the center in western quadrant
Gale Force Winds
=================
375 nm from the center in eastern quadrant
240 nm from the center in western quadrant
Dvorak Intensity:
Forecast and Intensity
=======================
24 HRS: 44.5N 127.7E – Extratropical Low over land northeastern China
Remnant Low from Nana takes days cruising the southwesst coast of Mexico, swings by Puerto Vallarta, picks up and drinks a full case of good Mexican Tequilla and instantly becomes TS Julio…party on girl!
It was as hot on the California Coast as it was in Death Valley today.
Furnace Creek, CA
Sunday 4:00 PM
Sunny
https://ssl.gstatic.com/onebox/weather/64/sunny.png
121
°F | °C
Precipitation: 0%
Humidity: 5%
Wind: 6 mph
https://www.sanluisobispo.com/news/weather-news/article245535995.html
It’s insane. In the NWS Los Angeles/Oxnard Discussion page I saw Woodland Hills, CA broke a record as well–and…Solvang?:
Epic heat across southwestern CA today, where the all-time record high temperature for the four county area we cover (Los Angeles, Ventura, Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo Counties) occurred at Woodland Hills (Pierce College) with a high of at least 121 degrees. This is the first time an official climate station for the four-county area has reached 120 or more. The previous all-time high at Woodland Hills was 119 degrees on July 22, 2006. In addition, there were other automated weather stations not part of our official climate network that reached 120 or more including 122 degrees in Solvang and another site in Woodland Hills, and 120 degrees at San Luis Obispo RAWS and Fillmore. Additional heating is possible thru 5 PM or so, so these numbers could go higher. Additional climate sites could reach or exceed their all-time highs including Burbank and Paso Robles. Many daily and monthly records will likely fall today as well. This is an historic heat wave for southwestern CA and one that will be remembered for a long time.
https://www.wrh.noaa.gov/lox/scripts/getprodplus.php?sid=lox&pil=afd&back=yes
Woodland Hills 121℉ (49.5℃), Paso Robles 117℉, Santa Cruz 109℉
You will become the first tropical storm : 92L or 93L
https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/xgtwo/two_atl_5d0.png
ballin
picking up some good rains here this evening, alot of lightning and thunder too…https://static.baynews9.com/images/wx/bn9/radar/florida/1599432850.jpg
https://yaleclimateconnections.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Screenshot_2020-09-06-Japan-Meteorological-Agency-Table-of-Hourly-Weather-Observations-Today-Yesterday-1599429724.1562.png city in Tsushima island with central pressure in the upper 950s
Japan Meteorological Agency
Tropical Cyclone Advisory #54 – 6:00 AM JST September 7 2020
TYPHOON HAISHEN (T2010)
=================================================
30 km Southwest of Tsushima (Nagasaki Prefecture)
At 21:00 PM UTC, Typhoon Haishen (950 hPa) located at 34.0N 129.1E has 10 minute sustained winds of 80 knots with gusts of 115 knots. The cyclone is reported as moving north at 22 knots.
Storm Force Winds
=================
150 nm from the center in eastern quadrant
90 nm from the center in western quadrant
Gale Force Winds
=================
375 nm from the center in eastern quadrant
240 nm from the center in western quadrant
https://yaleclimateconnections.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/13824599-1599429471.7375.gif close to Tsushima island and landfall over South Korea
Looks like commits been reopened
Well it looks like they this closed the blog on the other site. Time too move it on over
Well they this closed the commits on the other blog I new it would happen sooner or later
https://disqus.com/home/discussion/wund/weather_underground_2993/
Backdoor….bookmark it.
Afternoon everyone….92L shows 35kt winds on the latest satellite scan (18z), however does not appear to have a fully closed off center of circulation…..still slightly elongated…..you can see some western winds SW of the 18Z center coordinates……
https://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/MTCSWA/AL922020/2020AL92_MPSATWD_2020090618_SWND.png
Wish means this would go right too a tropical storm
Japan Meteorological Agency
Tropical Cyclone Advisory #53 – 3:00 AM JST September 7 2020
TYPHOON HAISHEN (T2010)
=================================================
About 40 km West Southwest of Hirado (Nagasaki Prefecture)
At 18:00 PM UTC, Typhoon Haishen (945 hPa) located at 32.9N 129.0E has 10 minute sustained winds of 85 knots with gusts of 120 knots. The cyclone is reported as moving north at 19 knots.
Storm Force Winds
=================
150 nm from the center in eastern quadrant
90 nm from the center in western quadrant
Gale Force Winds
=================
375 nm from the center in eastern quadrant
240 nm from the center in western quadrant
Dvorak Intensity: T5.0-
Forecast and Intensity
=======================
24 HRS: 42.6N 128.3E – 40 knots (CAT 1/Tropical Storm) Over land northeastern China
48 HRS: 46.0N 127.6E – Extratropical Low over land northeastern China
https://yaleclimateconnections.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Screenshot_2020-09-06-Japan-Meteorological-Agency-Table-of-Hourly-Weather-Observations-Today-Yesterday-1599424836.0558.png