Typhoon Aere (Marce) | |
Formed: | August 17, 2004 |
Dissipated: | August 31, 2004 |
Winds: | 80 |
Pressure: | 955 |
Basin: | wpac |
Winds: | 90 |
Pressure: | 976 |
Year: | 2004 |
Fatalities: | 107 direct |
Damage: | 313000 |
Season: | 2004 Pacific typhoon season |
Typhoon Aere, known in the Philippines as Typhoon Marce,[1] was a mid-season category two typhoon that brought severe damage to Taiwan and the People's Republic of China in August 2004. Aere is the Marshallese word for 'storm'.
An area of convection developed approximately 250 miles east of Pohnpei late on August 13. By August 16, the disturbance had passed 40 miles north of Chuuk. It developed enough organization to be designated a tropical depression on August 19, about 400 miles west of Guam. From there, it moved northwest at 12 mph along the southwestern periphery of a mid-level steering ridge. The system reached tropical storm status on August 20, gaining the name Aere.[2]
News sources to date indicate that Taiwan took the brunt of Typhoon Aere. Thirty-four people were killed as a result of the storm, and fifteen died as a mudslide buried a remote mountain village in the north of the island. Agricultural losses were estimated at 7.7 million New Taiwan dollars (US$313,000 in 2004, US$321,451 in 2005). Forty-three deaths in the Philippines were caused by heavy rains induced by the typhoon. Nearly 16,000 people were evacuated from homes engulfed in floodwaters. A swollen river near the northern province of Nueva Ecija blocked traffic on a main road and stranded hundreds of commuters overnight. Eight provinces in northern and central Luzon were most severely affected with 70% of the provinces under water at one point.[3]
Additionally, the name Kodo was replaced in 2002 without being used. The name Aere was chosen to replace the name.[4]