Typhoon Dan (Pepang) | |
Formed: | October 2, 1999 |
Dissipated: | October 10, 1999 |
Winds: | 80 |
Pressure: | 955 |
Winds: | 110 |
Pressure: | 955 |
Basin: | WPac |
Year: | 1999 |
Fatalities: | 44 total |
Damages: | 242000000 |
Season: | 1999 Pacific typhoon season |
Typhoon Dan, known in the Philippines as Typhoon Pepang, was a tropical cyclone that affected multiple areas in the Western Pacific Ocean. As the twenty-third tropical storm and the fifth typhoon of the 1999 Pacific typhoon season, it originated from a tropical depression in the Philippine Sea. The depression strengthened to a tropical storm two days later, attaining the name Dan.
Heavy rainfall and major flooding hit the Philippines, China, and Taiwan. 44 people died, and around $432.8 million (2022 USD) in damage was caused due to Dan.
An area of low pressure, would be upgraded to a tropical depression, designated as 26W, developed over the Philippine Sea on October 1 about 750km (470miles) to the east of Luzon. The PAGASA designated the system Pepang.[1] The system intensified as it moved west-northwest, making the system gain the name Dan on October 3. Dan would strengthen to a typhoon status the next day. Typhoon Dan reached its peak with winds of 205km/h early on October 5 and hit northern Luzon at that strength. The typhoon weakened as it entered the South China Sea, but re-intensified as it turned towards the north. Typhoon Dan made its second landfall near Xiamen, China on October 9 and weakened overland. Dan turned to the northeast and weakened to a tropical depression before it moved over the Yellow Sea late on October 10, later getting absorbed by a frontal system over the Yellow Sea early the next day.[2]
Thirty-four died and 1,400 people were injured as a result of the storm in Fujian. 1,500 houses were destroyed and $240 million of damage occurred in the province.[3] Dan was the worst typhoon to hit Xiamen in 46 years, killing five and injuring over 100 in the city. In Zhangzhou, collapsing buildings resulted in seven deaths. Eighteen people were killed nearby in Quanzhou.[4] Dan caused more damage on top of an earthquake that had occurred not long before Dan's landfall.[5]
Typhoon Dan brought torrential rain of up to 500mm, affected 2,600 homes and killed at least five people. Hundreds of houses were damaged in Northern Luzon. There was more than $2 million of damage to agriculture in the Philippines.
Typhoon Dan brought torrential rain of up to 500mm to southern Taiwan.[6] Southern Taiwan was still recovering from the Jiji earthquake of the previous month, and Dan delayed the recovery efforts. The typhoon burst a dike in Kaohsiung and another in Tainan, that had been damaged by the earthquake. Dan knocked down a large number of trees on Kinmen, which led to the disruption of 70% of the island's power supply. Several fishing boats were sunk and houses were damaged on Penghu.[7] Over 850 areas of Taiwan were put under a landslide warning.[8]