Tropical Storm Pulasan Explained

Tropical Storm Pulasan (Helen)
Formed:September 15, 2024
Extratropical:September 21, 2024
Dissipated:September 27, 2024
Winds:45
Pressure:992
Winds:60
Pressure:995
Basin:WPac
Fatalities:17
Injuries:47
Missing:12
Year:2024
Damage:4150000
Areas:Philippines, Eastern China, South Korea, Japan (especially Ishikawa Prefecture), British Columbia
Season:2024 Pacific typhoon season

Tropical Storm Pulasan, known in the Philippines as Tropical Storm Helen, was a tropical cyclone that impacted East China, Japan, South Korea and the Philippines in September 2024. Pulasan developed over the Philippine Sea as a tropical depression on September 15 and strengthened into the fourteenth named storm of the annual typhoon season the following day. After gaining organization, the system rapidly developed and reached its peak intensity with winds of 85 km/h (50 mph) and a central pressure of 992 hPa (29.29 inHg). Pulasan then turned northwestward, eventually moving across Okinawa Island and making landfall in Zhoushan, Zhejiang, followed by a second landfall in Shanghai, just days after Typhoon Bebinca affected the Shanghai area on September 19. As the storm moved overland, it maintained a well-defined circulation center; however, it gradually turned northeastward under the influence of prevailing mid-latitude westerlies. Pulasan reemerged over the East China Sea, just off the coast of China, showcasing a large, near-symmetric area of deep convection to the southeast on September 20. By 06:00 UTC on September 21, Pulasan had transitioned into an extratropical low as it moved east-northeastward and became embedded within the polar front jet to the north, passing over southern South Korea. The extratropical storm entered the Sea of Japan on September 22, crossed the Tōhoku region, and then emerged into the Pacific Ocean while being absorbed by another extratropical cyclone. The extratropical remnants of Pulasan were last noted by the Japan Meteorological Agency on September 24 near the International Dateline; however, the Ocean Prediction Center indicated that these remnants crossed the International Dateline and entered the Central North Pacific Ocean late on September 25. Afterward, the remnants gradually approached the coast of British Columbia, making landfall on September 27 and dissipating after moving inland the same day.

In China, the Yangjiazhai meteorological station in Fengxian District and the Nicheng Park meteorological station in Pudong District both recorded more than of rainfall within a six-hour period, breaking historical records for each district since meteorological observations began. Xinhua reported that the city evacuated 112,000 people and suspended some ferry and train services. The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration noted that the southwest monsoon, enhanced by Soulik and Pulasan, would bring strong to gale-force winds across the Philippines. Heavy rains caused by Pulasan triggered widespread landslides and flooding in the Noto Peninsula, causing extensive damage that was exacerbated by the 2024 Noto earthquake, which devastated the region in January. In South Korea, the cities of Changwon, Yeosu and Busan recorded, and of rainfall, respectively, on September 21. The remnants of Tropical Storm Pulasan caused 15,000 customers to lose power, primarily on Vancouver Island, especially in Campbell River and Courtenay. In total, the tropical storm caused at least 17 deaths, 47 injuries, and left twelve people missing.

Meteorological history

Tropical Storm Pulasan emerged from an area of atmospheric convection 106abbr=onNaNabbr=on west-southwest of Andersen Air Force Base, Guam on September 14.[1] Satellite imagery indicates a broad, elongated area of circulation obscured by flaring and disorganized deep convection, with the disturbance situated in a favorable environment for development. At 00:00 UTC on September 15, the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) designated the system as a low-pressure area, having previously identified it as a tropical depression.[2] [3] The United States Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) issued a tropical cyclone formation alert, noting that the system was disorganized, deep, fragmented, and had flaring convection obscuring the low-level circulation.[4] Shortly after, the depression intensified into a tropical storm and was named Pulasan by the JMA.[5] Pulasan was characterized by a large cyclonic circulation exceeding 6000NaN0 and extensive gale-force winds, leading the JTWC to classify it as a monsoon depression at 06:00 UTC on September 16,[6] before later upgrading it to a tropical storm and designating it as 15W.[7]

Pulasan was progressing north-northeastward along the northwestern edge of a mid-level subtropical high, with a band of enhanced winds encircling the eastern edge, accompanied by deep convection,[8] while the center stayed clear and was supplied with dry air from a tropical upper tropospheric trough cell to the west.[9] By 11:00 PHT (03:00 UTC) on September 17, Pulasan had entered the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) and was subsequently named Helen by the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA).[10] The JMA reported that Pulasan reached its peak intensity at 06:00 UTC, with 10-minute sustained winds of 45kn and a central pressure of 992abbr=onNaNabbr=on,[11] before ultimately peaking with 1-minute sustained winds of 60kn.[12] Pulasan's low-level circulation has remained broad and somewhat exposed,[13] as dry air continues to encircle its southern side while the system moves northwestward along the southwestern edge of a mid-level subtropical high.[14] Pulasan exited the PAR on September 18 while traversing Okinawa Island in Japan's Ryukyu Archipelago as its circulation center strengthened with persistent convection,[15] and satellite imagery displayed flaring convection along with weak easterly outflow over the East China Sea.[16] [17] On September 19, Pulasan made landfall in Zhoushan, Zhejiang, followed by a second landfall in Shanghai, just days after Typhoon Bebinca affected the Shanghai area.[18] [19] As the storm moved overland, it maintained a well-defined circulation center;[20] however, the system gradually turned northeastward under the influence of mid-latitude prevailing westerlies.[21] Pulasan reemerged over the East China Sea, just off the coast of Jiangsu, China, showcasing a large, near-symmetric area of deep convection to the southeast on September 20.[22] Meanwhile, satellite imagery and surface reports from Jeju Island indicated that it was in the earliest phase of extratropical transition, with vigorous deep convection occurring over the southern semicircle.[23] By 06:00 UTC on September 21, the JMA reported that Pulasan had transitioned into an extratropical low as it moved east-northeastward and became embedded within the polar front jet to the north,[24] passing over southern South Korea.[25] The JTWC then ceased issuing advisories on the system as it underwent frontogenesis while entering the baroclinic zone.[26] The extratropical storm entered the Sea of Japan on September 22, crossed the Tōhoku region, and then emerged into the Pacific Ocean while being absorbed by another extratropical cyclone.[27] The extratropical remnants of Pulasan were last noted by the JMA on September 24 near the International Dateline;[28] however, the Ocean Prediction Center indicated that these remnants crossed the International Dateline and entered the Central North Pacific Ocean late on September 25.[29] The remnants gradually approached the coast of British Columbia,[30] making landfall on September 27,[31] moving inland,[32] and dissipating the same day.[33]

Preparations and impact

The Yangjiazhai meteorological station in Fengxian District and the Nicheng Park meteorological station in Pudong District both recorded more than of rainfall within a six-hour period, breaking historical records for each district since meteorological observations began.[34] Due to Pulasan, winds of were recorded in Fengxian, Shanghai, where several roads and neighborhoods were flooded.[35] Xinhua reported that the city evacuated 112,000 people and suspended some ferry and train services.[36] Total damage in China was estimated at 30 million yuan (US$4.15 million).[37] PAGASA reported that the southwest monsoon, enhanced by Soulik and Pulasan, will bring strong to gale-force winds across the Philippines.[38] As Pulasan approached Japan, 44,700 residents from Wajima, Suzu, and Noto in Ishikawa Prefecture were given evacuation orders, along with 16,000 others in Yamagata and Niigata Prefectures.[39] The Japan Meteorological Agency issued the highest level of alert for heavy rain across several cities in Ishikawa.[40] Heavy rains caused by Pulasan triggered widespread landslides and flooding in the Noto Peninsula, causing extensive damage which was exacerbated by the 2024 Noto earthquake which devastated the region in January. The floods killed 16 people, injured 47, destroyed 673 houses and damaged 1,284 others.[41] In Wajima, of rainfall was recorded within an hour.[42] Up to ten people were left missing in the town, including four due to a landslide at a construction site. In Suzu, one person drowned and another was missing. In Noto, one person was missing and two others were critically injured after a landslide struck their home. At least twelve rivers across Ishikawa overflowed, and 6,500 households were left without power in the prefecture, according to Hokuriku Electric Power Company.

At least 903 people from 581 households were evacuated across six provinces in South Korea.[43] In South Korea, the cities of Changwon, Yeosu and Busan recorded, and of rainfall respectively on September 21. Flooding affected 83 sections of public roads, leading to 18 incidents of soil loss and a wall collapse, 30 private facilities and 27 houses. Two trucks fell into a sinkhole in Busan. In Yangju city, Gyeonggi province, an elderly man died after being swept away by a torrent.[44] A total of 27 private homes were flooded, affecting almost 30 private businesses, including shops and factories. Moreover, 641 areas within 22 national parks throughout the country were still unreachable.[45] The remnants of Tropical Storm Pulasan have caused wind warnings for several areas in British Columbia, including the B.C. Coast, sections of Vancouver Island, the Central Coast, and Haida Gwaii,[46] while approximately 15,000 customers lost power, primarily on Vancouver Island, especially in Campbell River and Courtenay.[47]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. September 14, 2024. abpw. 97W. 19Z. 0. https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/abpwweb.txt. https://web.archive.org/web/20240914000000/https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/abpwweb.txt. September 14, 2024. Alt URL
  2. Warning and Summary 150000 . September 15, 2024 . Japan Meteorological Agency . Tokyo, Japan . September 15, 2024 . https://archive.today/20240915101820/https://www.wis-jma.go.jp/d/o/RJTD/Alphanumeric/Warning/Warnings_and_weather_summary/20240915/000000/A_WWJP27RJTD150000_C_RJTD_20240915022931_20.txt. September 15, 2024.
  3. Prognostic Reasoning No. 1 for tropical depression . September 15, 2024 . Japan Meteorological Agency . Tokyo, Japan . September 15, 2024 . https://archive.today/20240915092605/https://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/raw/wt/wtpq31.rjtd..txt. September 15, 2024.
  4. September 15, 2024. tcfa. 97W. 20Z. https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/wp9124web.txt. https://web.archive.org/web/20240915000000/https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/wp9124web.txt. September 15, 2024. September 15, 2024. Alt URL
  5. Tropical Cyclone Advisory for TS Pulasan (2414) . September 15, 2024 . Japan Meteorological Agency . Tokyo, Japan . September 15, 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240915142528/https://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/raw/wt/wtpq51.rjtd..txt. September 15, 2024.
  6. September 16, 2024. abpw. 97W. 06Z. https://wiki.chlod.net/jtwc/text/2024-09-16-0620-abpwweb.txt.
  7. September 16, 2024. prog. TS. 15W. 1. Pulasan. https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/wp1224web.txt. https://archive.today/20240917094818/https://www.wis-jma.go.jp/d/o/PGTW/Alphanumeric/Warning/Tropical_cyclone/20240916/210000/A_WDPN32PGTW162100_C_RJTD_20240916210518_91.txt. September 17, 2024.
  8. Prognostic Reasoning No. 3 for TS Pulasan (2414) . September 15, 2024 . Japan Meteorological Agency . Tokyo, Japan . September 15, 2024 . https://archive.today/20240916085959/https://www.wis-jma.go.jp/d/o/RJTD/Alphanumeric/Warning/Tropical_cyclone/20240915/180000/A_WTPQ31RJTD151800_C_RJTD_20240915200516_1.txt. September 16, 2024.
  9. September 17, 2024. prog. TS. 15W. 4. Pulasan. https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/wp1224web.txt. https://web.archive.org/web/20240917150707/https://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/raw/wd/wdpn32.pgtw..txt. September 17, 2024.
  10. Helen . Pulasan . tcb . https://ia804609.us.archive.org/15/items/pagasa-24-TC08/PAGASA_24-TC08_Helen_TCB%2301.pdf . 2024-09-17 . 1 . TS.
  11. Tropical Cyclone Advisory for TS Pulasan (2410) . September 17, 2024 . Japan Meteorological Agency . Tokyo, Japan . September 17, 2024 . https://archive.today/20240917093403/https://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/raw/wt/wtpq51.rjtd..txt . September 17, 2024.
  12. Web site: JTWC Best Track on Tropical Storm Pulasan (15W) . 27 September 2024 . National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
  13. September 18, 2024. prog. TS. 15W. 6. Pulasan. https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/wp1224web.txt. https://web.archive.org/web/20240918085216/https://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/raw/wd/wdpn32.pgtw..txt. September 18, 2024.
  14. Prognostic Reasoning No. 14 for TS Pulasan (2414) . September 18, 2024 . Japan Meteorological Agency . Tokyo, Japan . September 18, 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240918150025/https://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/raw/wt/wtpq31.rjtd..txt. September 18, 2024.
  15. Helen . Pulasan . tcb . https://ia904609.us.archive.org/15/items/pagasa-24-TC08/PAGASA_24-TC08_Helen_TCB%2305-FINAL.pdf . 2024-09-18 . 5F . TS.
  16. September 19, 2024. prog. TS. 15W. 10. Pulasan. https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/wp1224web.txt. https://archive.today/20240919154433/https://www.wis-jma.go.jp/d/o/PGTW/Alphanumeric/Warning/Tropical_cyclone/20240919/030000/A_WDPN32PGTW190300_C_RJTD_20240919030831_55.txt. September 19, 2024.
  17. September 19, 2024. prog. TS. 15W. 12. Pulasan. https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/wp1224web.txt. https://web.archive.org/web/20240919151903/https://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/raw/wd/wdpn32.pgtw..txt. September 19, 2024.
  18. Web site: Yoon . John . September 19, 2024 . Tropical Storm Pulasan Strikes Near Shanghai, Days After Typhoon Hit . September 19, 2024 . The New York Times.
  19. Web site: Typhoon Pulasan makes 2nd landfall in China . 2024-09-28 . english.shanghai.gov.cn.
  20. September 20, 2024. prog. TD. 15W. 14. Pulasan. https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/wp1224web.txt. https://archive.today/20240920091015/https://www.wis-jma.go.jp/d/o/PGTW/Alphanumeric/Warning/Tropical_cyclone/20240920/030000/A_WDPN32PGTW200300_C_RJTD_20240920025417_100.txt. September 20, 2024.
  21. Prognostic Reasoning No. 22 for TS Pulasan (2414) . September 20, 2024 . Japan Meteorological Agency . Tokyo, Japan . September 20, 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240920150502/https://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/raw/wt/wtpq31.rjtd..txt. September 20, 2024.
  22. September 20, 2024. prog. TD. 15W. 16. Pulasan. https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/wp1224web.txt. https://web.archive.org/web/20240920150526/https://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/raw/wd/wdpn32.pgtw..txt. September 20, 2024.
  23. September 20, 2024. prog. TD. 15W. 17. Pulasan. https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/wp1224web.txt. https://archive.today/20240921094816/https://www.wis-jma.go.jp/d/o/PGTW/Alphanumeric/Warning/Tropical_cyclone/20240920/210000/A_WDPN32PGTW202100_C_RJTD_20240920203517_19.txt. September 21, 2024.
  24. September 21, 2024. prog. TD. 15W. 19. Pulasan. https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/wp1224web.txt. https://archive.today/20240921092946/https://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/raw/wd/wdpn32.pgtw..txt. September 21, 2024.
  25. Prognostic Reasoning No. 25 for Extropical Cyclone located at 34N 125E. September 21, 2024 . Japan Meteorological Agency . Tokyo, Japan . September 21, 2024 . https://archive.today/20240921092924/https://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/raw/wt/wtpq31.rjtd..txt. September 21, 2024.
  26. September 21, 2024. warn. TS. 15W. 20. Pulasan. https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/products/wp1224web.txt. https://web.archive.org/web/20240921144819/https://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/data/raw/wt/wtpn32.pgtw..txt. September 21, 2024.
  27. Web site: . College Park, Maryland . North Pacific Ocean Difax Version 7 Days. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20240924135811/https://ocean.weather.gov/Loops/index.php?category=ua&product=UA_Pac_Difax&days=7&loop=0. September 24, 2024 . September 24, 2024 . en.
  28. Warning and Summary 241800 . September 25, 2024 . Japan Meteorological Agency . Tokyo, Japan . September 15, 2024 . https://archive.today/20240925090733/https://www.wis-jma.go.jp/d/o/RJTD/Alphanumeric/Warning/Warnings_and_weather_summary/20240924/180000/A_WWJP27RJTD241800_C_RJTD_20240924202416_10.txt. September 25, 2024.
  29. Web site: . College Park, Maryland . North Pacific Ocean Difax Version 7 Days. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20240927110551/https://ocean.weather.gov/Loops/index.php?category=ua&product=UA_Pac_Difax&days=7&loop=0 . September 27, 2024 . September 27, 2024 . en.
  30. Web site: WPC Surface Analysis valid for 09/27/2024 at 15 UTC. wpc.ncep.noaa.gov. Weather Prediction Center. September 27, 2024. September 27, 2024.
  31. Web site: WPC Surface Analysis valid for 09/26/2024 at 18 UTC. wpc.ncep.noaa.gov. Weather Prediction Center. September 27, 2024. September 26, 2024.
  32. Web site: WPC Surface Analysis valid for 09/27/2024 at 06 UTC. wpc.ncep.noaa.gov. Weather Prediction Center. September 27, 2024. September 27, 2024.
  33. Web site: September 27, 2024 . WPC Surface Analysis valid for 09/27/2024 at 18 UTC . September 27, 2024 . wpc.ncep.noaa.gov . Weather Prediction Center.
  34. Web site: Shanghai evacuates hundreds of thousands as Typhoon Pulasan triggers heavy rainfall-Xinhua . 2024-09-24 . english.news.cn.
  35. News: 20 September 2024 . Typhoon Pulasan floods Shanghai . 21 September 2024 . Voice of America.
  36. Web site: China's Shanghai hit by second major typhoon in a week – DW – 09/20/2024 . 2024-09-24 . dw.com . en.
  37. Web site: https://www.typhooncommittee.org/19IWS/docs/Members%20REport/CHina/Member%20Report[China.pdf MEMBER REPORT [China] ESCAP/WMO Typhoon Committee 19th Integrated Workshop AP-TCRC, Shanghai, China 19 – 22 November 2024 ]. 2024-11-18 . Typhoon Committee . en.
  38. Helen . Pulasan . tcb . https://ia904609.us.archive.org/15/items/pagasa-24-TC08/PAGASA_24-TC08_Helen_TCB%2302.pdf . 2024-09-18 . 1 . TS.
  39. News: 21 September 2024 . Japan orders evacuations as heavy rains trigger floods in earthquake-hit region . 21 September 2024 . Manila Standard.
  40. News: 21 September 2024 . Heavy rain triggers deadly landslides and floods in Japan . 21 September 2024 . Ludlow Advertiser.
  41. 令和6年9月20日からの大雨による被害及び 消防機関等の対応状況 (第32報). FDMA. 21 November 2024. 24 November 2024. ja.
  42. News: One Dead, 7 Missing As Heavy Rains Trigger Floods In Central Japan. 21 September 2024. 21 September 2024. Channels TV.
  43. News: 21 September 2024 . Over 900 evacuated as heavy rain floods homes, roads in southern S. Korea . 21 September 2024 . Yonhap News Agency.
  44. News: 22 September 2024 . South Korea's southern region experienced its heavy rain in 200 years and 1,500 people were evacuated . 22 September 2024 . Yonhap News Agency.
  45. Web site: September 23, 2024 . Over 900 evacuated as heavy rain floods homes, roads in southern South Korea . September 23, 2024 . en.inform.kz.
  46. Web site: Crawford . Emma . 2024-09-27 . Wind warnings in effect across B.C. coast, other areas of province . 2024-09-28 . CityNews Vancouver . en.
  47. Web site: 2024-09-28 . 'A miracle nobody got hurt': Residents worry tree will fall during storm season . 2024-09-28 . Comox Valley Record . en.