A 'Regional Specialized Meteorological Centre' (also ''Regional Specialized Meteorological Center'' and ''Regional Specialised Meteorological Centre'') is responsible for the distribution of information, advisories, and warnings regarding the specific program they have a part of, agreed by consensus at the
World Meteorological Organization as part of the World Weather Watch.
Tropical Cyclone Programme
There are six such meteorological centres and five regional
Tropical Cyclone Warning Centres utilized for naming of tropical cyclones and the distribution of
tropical cyclone advisories and warnings:
★ Southwest
Pacific Ocean: RSMC Nadi-Tropical Cyclone Centre -
Fiji Meteorological Service (Nadi, Fiji)
★ Southwest
Indian Ocean: RSMC La Reunion-Tropical Cyclone Centre /
Météo France (Réunion island, French Overseas Department)
★
Bay of Bengal and
Arabian Sea: RSMC - Tropical Cyclones New Delhi /
India Meteorological Department (New Delhi, India)
★ Western North Pacific Ocean and
South China Sea - RSMC Tokyo /
Japan Meteorological Agency (Tokyo, Japan)
★ Central North Pacific Ocean - RSMC Honolulu
Central Pacific Hurricane Center (Honolulu, Hawaii, USA)
★ Northeast Pacific Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea, and north
Atlantic Ocean - RSMC Miami /
National Hurricane Center[1]
Major basins
Traditionally, areas of tropical cyclone formation are divided into seven basins. These include the north
Atlantic Ocean, the eastern and western parts of the
Pacific Ocean (considered separately because tropical cyclones rarely form in the central Pacific), the southwestern Pacific, the southwestern and southeastern
Indian Oceans, and the northern Indian Ocean. The western Pacific is the most active and the north Indian the least active. An average of 86 tropical cyclones of tropical storm intensity form annually worldwide, with 47 reaching hurricane/typhoon strength, and 20 becoming intense tropical cyclones (at least of
Category 3 intensity).
[2]
★ 'Northwestern Pacific Ocean:' Tropical storms in this region often affect
China,
Japan,
South Korea,
Hong Kong, the
Philippines, and
Taiwan, as well as countries in Southeast Asia such as
Vietnam and parts of
Indonesia, plus numerous
Oceanian islands. This is by far the most active basin, accounting for one-third of all tropical cyclone activity. The coast of
China sees the most landfalling tropical cyclones worldwide.
[3] The Philippines receives an average of 6-7 tropical cyclone landfalls per year.
[4]
★ 'Northeastern Pacific Ocean:' This is the second most active basin and has the highest number of storms per unit area. Storms that form here often affect western
Mexico, and less commonly the
Continental United States (in particular
California), or northern
Central America. No hurricane included in the modern database has made landfall in California; however, historical records from 1858 speak of a
storm that brought
San Diego winds over 75 mph/65 kts (marginal hurricane force), though it is not known if the storm actually made landfall.
[5] Tropical storms in
1939,
1976 and
1997 brought gale-force winds to California.
★ 'Northern Atlantic Ocean:' This region includes the North
Atlantic Ocean, the
Caribbean Sea, and the
Gulf of Mexico. Tropical cyclone formation here varies widely from year to year, ranging from one to over twenty per year with an average of around ten.
[ Frequently Asked Questions: What are the average, most, and least tropical cyclones occurring in each basin? Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory, Hurricane Research Division ] The
United States Atlantic coast,
Mexico,
Central America, the
Caribbean Islands, and
Bermuda are frequently affected by storms in this basin. Venezuela, the south-east of Canada and Atlantic
Macaronesian islands also are occasionally affected. Many of the more intense Atlantic storms are
Cape Verde-type hurricanes, which form off the west coast of
Africa near the
Cape Verde islands. Occasionally, a hurricane that evolves into an
extratropical cyclone can reach western
Europe, including
Hurricane Gordon (2006), which spread high winds across
Spain and the
British Isles in September 2006.
[6] Tropical Storm Vince, which made landfall on the southwestern coast of
Spain as a tropical depression in September 2005, is the only known system to impact mainland Europe as a tropical cyclone.
[7]
★ 'Northern Indian Ocean:' This basin is divided into two areas, the
Bay of Bengal and the
Arabian Sea, with the Bay of Bengal dominating (5 to 6 times more activity). This basin's season has a double peak: one in April and May, before the onset of the
monsoon, and another in October and November, just after.
[8] The most deadly tropical cyclones have formed in this basin, including the
1970 Bhola cyclone that killed 200,000 people. Nations affected include
India,
Bangladesh,
Sri Lanka,
Thailand,
Myanmar, and
Pakistan. Rarely, a tropical cyclone that forms in this basin affects the
Arabian Peninsula.
★ 'Southwestern Pacific Ocean:' Tropical activity in this region largely affects
Australia and
Oceania. Tropical storms rarely reach the vicinity of
Brisbane, Australia and into
New Zealand, usually during or after extratropical transition.
[9]
★ 'Southeastern Indian Ocean:' Tropical activity in this region affects
Australia and
Indonesia. According to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, the most frequently hit portion of Australia is between
Exmouth and
Broome in
Western Australia.
[10]
★ 'Southwestern Indian Ocean:' Despite nearly a half century of historical data, research at Reunion Island into tropical cyclones has been a priority only since
1999, when
Météo-France began assigning additional personnel for research purposes.
Cyclones forming in this area can affect
Madagascar,
Mozambique,
Mauritius,
Réunion,
Comoros,
Tanzania, and
Kenya.
[11]
Environmental Emergency Response Programme
There are eight meteorological centres for distribution of transport, deposition, and dispersion modeling, in the event of an environmental catastrophe that crosses international borders:
[12]
★
Exeter, England RSMC - For Europe and Africa
★
Toulouse, France RSMC - For Europe and Africa
★
Montréal, Canada RSMC - For the Americas, with backup responsibility for the Southwest Pacific
★
Washington, United States RSMC - For the Americas, with backup responsibility for the Southwest Pacific
★
Beijing, China RSMC - For Asia
★
Obninsk, Russia RSMC - For Asia
★
Tokyo, Japan RSMC - For Asia
★
Melbourne, Australia RSMC - For the Southwest Pacific
[13]
See Also
★
Tropical cyclone
★
Tropical Cyclone Warning Centre
★
World Meteorological Organization
References
1. World Meteorological Organization. Severe Weather Information Centre. Retrieved on 2006-12-10.
2. Climate Variability table - Tropical Cyclones Chris Landsea
3. Societal Impact of Tropical Cyclones Weyman, James C. and Linda J. Anderson-Berry
4. Characteristics of Tropical Cyclones Affecting the Philippine Islands Shoemaker, Daniel N.
5. The San Diego Hurricane of 2 October 1858 Chenoweth, Michael and Christopher Landsea
6. Tropical Cyclone Report: Hurricane Gordon: 10-20 September 2006 Blake, Eric S.
7. Tropical Cyclone Report: Hurricane Vince: 8-11 October 2005 Franklin, James L.
8. 1.2: North Indian Tropical Cyclones Joint Typhoon Warning Center
9. How often is New Zealand hit by tropical cyclones?, Sinclair, Mark, , , Water & Atmosphere, 2002
10. Tropical Cyclones in Western Australia – Climatology Bureau of Meteorology
11.
12. Roland Draxler. Capabilities of the NOAA Washington Regional Specialized Meteorological Center for Atmospheric Transport Model Products for Environmental Emergency Response. Retrieved on 2006-12-10.
13. World Meteorological Organization.WMO Regional Specialized Meteorological Centres’ Operational Practices / Procedures and Role of National Meteorological and Hydrological Services for Nuclear Emergency Response Activities. Retrieved on 2006-12-10.
External links
★
US National Hurricane Center - North Atlantic, Eastern Pacific
★
Central Pacific Hurricane Center - Central Pacific
★
Japan Meteorological Agency - NW Pacific
★
India Meteorological Department -
Bay of Bengal and the
Arabian Sea
★
Météo-France - La Reunion - South Indian Ocean from Africa to 90° E
★
Fiji Meteorological Service - South Pacific east of 160°, north of 25° S