Cyclone

A tropical cyclone is a cyclone of tropical origin of small diameter (some hundreds of kilometres) with a minimum surface pressure in some cases of less than 900 hPa, very violent winds and torrential rain; sometimes accompanied by thunderstorms. It usually contains a central region, knows as the ‘eye’ of the storm, with a diameter of the order of some tens of kilometres, and with light winds and a more of less lightly clouded sky (WMO, 2017).

Hurricanes, tropical cyclones and typhoons affect millions every year, and are likely to become more severe in the future although possibly less frequent due to global warming.

Tropical cyclones, hurricanes and typhoons, although named differently, describe the same hazard type. They are referred to as tropical cyclones in the Indian Ocean and South Pacific, hurricanes in the Atlantic and eastern North Pacific, and typhoons in the western North Pacific. In the north Atlantic and the Caribbean, August and September are usually peak months of the hurricane season, which spans from June through to November. In the eastern North Pacific, the season starts in mid-May and finishes in November. The North Indian Ocean cyclone season is between April and December, with peaks in May and October.

Tropical cyclones are often difficult to predict, because they can suddenly weaken or change their course. However, meteorologists use state-of-art technologies and develop modern techniques such as numerical weather prediction models to predict how a tropical cyclone evolves, including its movement and change of intensity, when and where one will hit land and at what speed. Official warnings are then issued by the National Meteorological Services of the countries concerned (WMO).

Risk factors

  • Climate change: Due to warmer global temperatures, the proportion of high-intensity cyclones has increased. Also, cyclones are likely to move slower on land, and thus become more devastating.
  • Environmental degradation: Deforestation creates a warm area that draws in sea breezes from the ocean during the daytime, producing moisture, and leading to storms. In turn, rising waters can make wastewater treatment plants, sewers, hazardous waste sites, agricultural lands and animal feeding operations overflow, carrying pollutants into waterways.
  • Coastal development, including urbanization in coastal areas: Apart from increasing its exposure to coastal hazards, a city’s impervious sidewalks and streets increase, heavy rainfall can not be absorbed into the ground.

Vulnerable areas

  • Coastal areas are the most cyclone-prone.
  • Tropical cyclones are generally accompanied with heavy rains and severe flooding.
  • Coastal areas with shallow slant bathymetry and flat plain, with storm surges that may threaten tens of thousands of people living by the sea.
  • The most vulnerable populations are those who are living in poor buildings and fragile constructions in the coastal zones.
  • The Small Island Developing States are also vulnerable because some might be indebted, their economies undiversified and hazard events can affect the whole territory.

Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale

Hurricanes are ranked according to the Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale, which classifies the damage caused by hurricanes to wind speed. Hurricanes can inflict terrible damage even from their formative stage.

Risk reduction measures

  • Evacuation exercises to ensure full community participation.
  • Structural measures to withstand/lessen the impact of winds and flooding.
  • Land use control and limiting the exposure of critical assets.
  • Integrate flood risk assessment into urban planning strategies.
  • Avoid building directly on the coastline.
  • Maintain wind-proof buildings for community shelters.
  • Use of flood-resistant material in construction.
  • Grey infrastructure: sea walls revetments, protective embankments, levees and dikes.
  • Natural infrastructure: mangroves, coral reefs, wetlands and forests.
  • Education: information on cyclones and protection from cyclone damage in school and social activities.
  • Protect and evacuate animals.

Latest Cyclone additions in the Knowledge Base

This publication illustrates the results of a study conducted under the Climate and Disaster Resilience Initiative (CDRI) in Chennai City, India. It assesses the city's vulnerability to climate-related hazards (e.g. floods, cyclones, heat waves, droughts)

Photo by Flickr user, Remko Tanis, Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic
The new report has attracted the critical attention of Nobel Laureate Kenneth Arrow, who noted '… it provides a deep understanding of the relative roles of the market, government intervention, and social institutions in determining and improving both the prevention and the response to hazardous occurrences.'...
World Bank, the
United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction

This booklet describes the purpose, value and products of the international observational system, the Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS), which ensures global monitoring to provide ocean services for the purpose of sustainable development of ocean

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The Jamaican-based insurance company NEM has put together a number of suggestions in consultation with leading local experts well in advance of a hurricane threat - useful tips for you developing your own risk reduction plan, reports SFCN...
South Florida Caribbean News
Flood victims copyright WFP
'We may be keeping people alive, we may be helping people to survive but we are not doing it in a way that helps people recover and be able to face the next crisis,' said Peter Walker, director of the Tufts University-based Feinstein International Center in an interview with Paul Weinberg of IPS...
Inter Press Service International Association
50 countries across Asia and the Pacific agreed at the fourth Asian Ministerial Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction in Incheon, Republic of Korea, to make risk reduction a component of their national climate change adaptation policies to cope with extreme weather events...
United Nations News Centre

This report explores the answer to a difficult question: what are the potential costs for coastal adaptation from 2010 until 2050 in response to human-induced climate change? It analyses sea-level rise as a climate driver, and considers the possibility of

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