Tropical Storm Wendy (1999)
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Tropical Storm Wendy, known in the Philippines as Tropical Storm Mameng, was a deadly tropical cyclone that affected
China China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a country in East Asia. It is the world's most populous country, with a population exceeding 1.4 billion, slightly ahead of India. China spans the equivalent of five time zones and ...
in early September 1999. Wendy was first monitored on August 29, 1999, and was designated as a tropical depression by PAGASA the next day. Soon afterwards, the JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert on the strengthening disturbance. On the first day of September, the JTWC designated the disturbance as Tropical Depression 20W. The storm reached its peak intensity late on September 2 and made landfall on China the next night dissipating not long afterward. Wendy caused 133 deaths and 309.3 million dollars (1999 USD) in damage. Despite this, the name Wendy was not retired.


Meteorological history

On August 29, 1999, the JTWC began to monitor an area of thunderstorm activity northeast of Yap. By the next day, a broad Lower-Level-Circulation-Center (LLC) had formed with the upper-level environment in the region favorable for additional strengthening. That night,
PAGASA Pagasa may refer to: * ''Pagasa'' (genus), an insect genus in the family Nabidae *PAGASA, an acronym for the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration *"May Pagasa", a pen-name of José Rizal *Pagasa, alternate s ...
began to issue warnings on the disturbance designating it as Tropical Depression ''Mameng'' while the system was northwest of Palau. The system had two primary clusters of strong thunderstorm activity with the highest winds at the edge of the circulation center. The next morning, the JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert on the developing disturbance because satellite imagery had suggested that a separate LLC was forming in one of the clusters of thunderstorm activity. Early on September 1, the JTWC upgraded the disturbance to a tropical depression designating it "20W". At the time of the upgrade, the depression had winds of while east-southeast of
Catanduanes Island Catanduanes (; ), officially the Province of Catanduanes, is an island Provinces of the Philippines, province located in the Bicol Region of Luzon in the Philippines. It is the List of islands of the Philippines#Catanduanes, 12th-largest island ...
in the Philippines. Late on September 1, PAGASA upgraded Tropical Depression Mameng (20W) to a tropical storm. Early the next morning, the JTWC relocated the circulation center to the north as the depression began to approach the island of Luzon. Soon after the storm began to move away from Luzon after its closest approach, the JTWC upgraded Tropical Depression 20W to a tropical storm and assigned it the name ''Wendy''. At 0000 UTC on September 3, the JTWC, PAGASA, and the JMA, the official warning center for the region reported that Wendy (Mameng) had reached its peak intensity with PAGASA issuing its final advisory as it moved out of its area of responsibility. The JTWC reported that peak intensity was (1-min winds), PAGASA reported that peak intensity was (10-min winds), and the JMA reported that peak intensity was 40 mph (65 km.h) (10-min winds). Twelve hours later, the JMA downgraded the tropical storm to a depression. Tropical Storm Wendy continued to move towards the Chinese coast for the next day. As it was nearing land, a Central Dense Overcast, an area of very strong thunderstorms, formed and the tropical storm made landfall about east-northeast of Hong Kong, and promptly weakened into a tropical depression. The tropical depression dissipated early on September 4 while over the mountains of China.


Impact and aftermath

Tropical Storm Wendy killed at least 133 people in
Wenzhou, China Wenzhou (pronounced ; Wenzhounese: Yuziou ”y33–11 tÉ•iɤu33–32 ), historically known as Wenchow is a prefecture-level city in southeastern Zhejiang province in the People's Republic of China. Wenzhou is located at the extreme south east o ...
, left 59 missing, and injured 2600 more. The storm was labeled "the most serious storm of the century" by the local government. 2.21 million people were effected and 277 million dollars (1999 USD) in direct economic losses due to the storm. The tropical storm flooded over 20,000 hectares of farmland, killed 38,000 livestock and caused 35 million dollars (1999 USD) of direct economic losses in agriculture, forestry, fishing and livestock husbandry. The storm also flooded 54 large companies, causing losses of 4.3 million dollars (1999 USD). Rains from the storm destroyed 2000 houses and damaged 8326 more, and disrupting electric power, communication and traffic in some areas of the region.


See also

*
1999 Pacific typhoon season The 1999 Pacific typhoon season was the last Pacific typhoon season to use English names as storm names. It was a very inactive season, featuring the lowest number of typhoons on record, five. It had no official bounds; it ran year-round in 1999, ...
*
List of historic tropical cyclone names Tropical cyclones are Tropical cyclone naming, named for historical reasons and so as to avoid confusion when communicating with the public, as more than one tropical cyclone can exist at a time. Names are drawn in order from predetermined lists. ...


References


External links


JMA General Information
of Tropical Storm Wendy (9914) from Digital Typhoon
JMA Best Track Data (Graphics)
of Tropical Storm Wendy (9914)
JTWC Best Track Data
of Tropical Storm 20W (Wendy)
20W.WENDY
from the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory {{DEFAULTSORT:Wendy (1999) 1999 Pacific typhoon season Western Pacific tropical storms Typhoons in China 1999 disasters in China 1999 disasters in the Philippines Typhoons in the Philippines