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Updated 17 November 2009
According to the U.S. Drought monitor conditions have changed little across the U.S. by the second week of November. Precipitation brought slight improvements to on-going drought conditions in northern Wisconsin and the Pacific Northwest region. Drought conditions for the remaining portions of the western U.S. remained unchanged, except for areas around Lubbock, Texas which were upgraded to a moderate drought over the past week.
An unusual spring heat wave in South Australia broke numerous records and left the land extremely vulnerable to fire danger. Adelaide has experienced 8 consecutive days with temperatures in excess of 35 °C (95 °F), resulting in the first spring heat wave experienced by the city since records began in 1887. The average maximum temperature for Adeliade for the first 15 days of November was more than 8 °C (14 °F) above the normal of 24.9 °C (77 °F) (Source: Australian BoM). The most severe fire warning of 'catastrophic' was issued by the Australian government for much of South Australia, and the residents were encouraged to evacuate immediately. Extremely warm temperatures across South Australia are typical of El Niño events. Please visit NOAA's Climate Prediction Center's El Niño Diagnostic Page for more information on current El Niño conditions.
Tropical depression 11 (eventually strengthened to become Hurricane Ida) off Nicaragua’s Atlantic Coast and tropical disturbance 96E off El Salvador’s Pacific coast interacted on November 4th through 6th, causing torrential rainfall in El Salvador. The counter-clockwise flow of air around the disturbances pulled large quantities of moist, Pacific air over the coastal mountains, dumping up to 17.4 inches (442 mm) of rainfall. At least 192 were killed by the floods and landslides (Source: AP). The small town of Verapaz was particularly hard hit with 300 homes destroyed. An estimated 10,000 people were displaced and were living in shelters across the small Central American country (Source: French Press Agency). Flooding and mudslides associated with tropical cyclones are not uncommon for El Salvador; the impacts of Hurricane Mitch in 1998 killed an estimated 240 people in the country.
Heavy rainfall the first week of November caused significant flooding and landslides in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu on November 9th. Nearly 300 homes were demolished and at least 75 people were killed (Source: AFP). Officials in the flooded areas reported 24 inches (610 mm) of rainfall over the course of two days. Heavy rainfall in southern India is not uncommon during the months of November and December due to the reversal of the southwesterly monsoon flow to more northeasterly flow. The rainy season accounts for about 50 percent of Tamil Nadu’s annual rainfall.
Typhoon Mirinae made landfall in Vietnam on November 3rd as a category 1 tropical cyclone, producing heavy rains in that country and neighboring Cambodia. The subsequent flooding and induced landslide killed at least 130 people in Vietnam and another 2 in Cambodia. The storm also killed 27 people when it made landfall in the Philippines in late October (Source: Reuters). The rain and wind from the storm destroyed about 1,800 hectares (4,450 acres) of farmland and delayed coffee harvesting in parts of the country’s coffee belt (Source: Reuters). This storm, along with several other tropical cyclones this season, have killed over 2,000 people in Southeast Asia since September (Source: AP). The dense population centers along the Southeast Asian coast make the region susceptible to a high number of fatalities each typhoon season. Mirinae was the 21st named tropical cyclone this season for the basin, which typically experiences 31 per year.
Ida formed off the coast of Nicaragua on November 4th and strengthened to a category 1 hurricane before making landfall in that country on November 5th. It is rare for hurricanes to make landfall this late in the season, especially during an El Niño event. Up to 11 inches (280 mm) of rain was observed across Nicaragua and Honduras. (Please see the flooding report for impacts in El Salvador). Ida strengthened to a category 2 hurricane after re-emerging over the western Caribbean, with maximum winds of 105 mph (167 km/hr) and a central pressure of 993 mbar. Ida made a second landfall along the U.S. Gulf Coast near Dauphin Island, Alabama as a tropical storm on November 10th. The largest impact of Ida in the U.S. included heavy rainfall along the Gulf Coast and Southeast. Coastal flooding and beach erosion was widespread due to a 3-6 foot storm surge along the Alabama and Florida coasts.
The remnants of Ida moved off the Southeast U.S. coast and helped to spin-up a large and strong extratropical cyclone which moved along the east coast. These strong storms are frequently called Nor’easters because they have significant impacts in the Northeast U.S. Record storm surges were observed along the coasts of North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware on November 12th through 13th. Norfolk, Virginia recorded its highest storm surge ever at 5.96 feet, since observations began in 1927, beating the previous record of 5.62 feet during Hurricane Isabel in 2003. The storm was also associated with heavy rainfall, up to 11 inches (280 mm), and hurricane force winds. Wind gusts of 75 mph (121 km/hr) were reported at the Oceana Naval Air Station in Virginia. Several buildings in the Washington, D.C. area were evacuated due to fear they might collapse and at least 6 people were killed by the storm’s impacts (Source: AP).
Heavy snowfall affected portions of northern China on November 11th and 12th. Impacts from the storm killed at least 38 people, including four children who were killed from a collapsing school building (Source: BBC). According to the Chinese Central Meteorological Observatory, the Hebei Province experienced the heaviest snowfall in 55 years and the Shaanxi Province had its heaviest snowfall in history. Light snow was also observed in Beijing. The Chinese Ministry of Civil Affairs reported more than 9,000 buildings have collapsed and about 190,400 hectares of crops were affected, causing direct economic losses of about $659 million U.S. dollars (Source: The Global Times).
For questions on technical or scientific content of this report, please contact:
Jessica Blunden:For general climate monitoring questions, please contact:
CMB.Contact@noaa.govFor climate data orders, please contact the National Climatic Data Center's Climate Services and Monitoring Division:
NCDC.Orders@noaa.gov