1990 Pacific typhoon season#Severe Tropical Storm Nell

{{Short description|none}}

{{Infobox hurricane season

| Basin=WPac

| Year=1990

| Track=1990 Pacific typhoon season summary.jpg

| First storm formed=January 12, 1990

| Last storm dissipated=December 23, 1990

| Strongest storm name=Flo

| Strongest storm pressure=890

| Strongest storm winds=120

| Average wind speed=10

| Total depressions=41

| Total storms=31

| Total hurricanes=19

| Total intense=4 (unofficial)

| Fatalities=1,789

| Damages=6490

| Damagespre=>

| five seasons=1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992

| Atlantic season=1990 Atlantic hurricane season

| East Pacific season=1990 Pacific hurricane season

| North Indian season=1990 North Indian Ocean cyclone season

}}

The 1990 Pacific typhoon season was another active season, with 31 storms being named during the year. It had no official bounds; it ran year-round in 1990, but most tropical cyclones formed in the northwestern Pacific Ocean between May and November.Gary Padgett. [http://www.typhoon2000.ph/garyp_mgtcs/may03sum.txt May 2003 Tropical Cyclone Summary.] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101130222503/http://typhoon2000.ph/garyp_mgtcs/may03sum.txt |date=2010-11-30 }} Retrieved 2006-08-26. These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical cyclones form in the northwestern Pacific Ocean.

The scope of this article is limited to the Pacific Ocean, north of the equator and west of the International Date Line. Storms that form east of the date line and north of the equator are called hurricanes; see 1990 Pacific hurricane season. Tropical Storms formed in the entire west Pacific basin were assigned a name by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center. Tropical depressions in this basin have the "W" suffix added to their number. Tropical depressions that enter or form in the Philippine area of responsibility are assigned a name by the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration or PAGASA. This can often result in the same storm having two names.

Season summary

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Period = from:01/01/1991 till:01/01/1992

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barset:Hurricane width:10 align:left fontsize:S shift:(4,-4) anchor:till

from:12/01/1991 till:16/01/1991 color:ST text:"Koryn"

from:26/04/1991 till:03/05/1991 color:TS text:"Lewis"

from:15/05/1991 till:19/05/1991 color:TY text:"Marian"

from:20/05/1991 till:23/05/1991 color:TD text:"TD"

from:27/05/1991 till:28/05/1991 color:TD text:"TD"

from:31/05/1991 till:01/06/1991 color:TD text:"TD"

from:13/06/1991 till:15/06/1991 color:TD text:"04W"

from:13/06/1991 till:19/06/1991 color:ST text:"Nathan"

from:16/06/1991 till:25/06/1991 color:TY text:"Ofelia"

from:20/06/1991 till:30/06/1991 color:TY text:"Percy"

from:01/07/1991 till:02/07/1991 color:TD text:"TD"

from:04/07/1991 till:12/07/1991 color:TS text:"Robyn"

from:16/07/1991 till:17/07/1991 color:TD text:"TD"

from:21/07/1991 till:23/07/1991 color:TD text:"TD"

barset:break

from:21/07/1991 till:31/07/1991 color:ST text:"Tasha"

from:23/07/1991 till:29/07/1991 color:VSTY text:"Steve"

from:26/07/1991 till:05/08/1991 color:TY text:"Vernon"

from:04/08/1991 till:11/08/1991 color:ST text:"Winona"

from:11/08/1991 till:22/08/1991 color:TY text:"Yancy"

from:13/08/1991 till:15/08/1991 color:TS text:"Aka"

from:15/08/1991 till:25/08/1991 color:TY text:"Zola"

from:24/08/1991 till:01/09/1991 color:TY text:"Abe"

from:23/08/1991 till:31/08/1991 color:TY text:"Becky"

from:02/09/1991 till:04/09/1991 color:TD text:"Cecil"

from:03/09/1991 till:10/09/1991 color:TY text:"Dot"

from:09/09/1991 till:20/09/1991 color:TY text:"Ed"

from:12/09/1991 till:23/09/1991 color:VITY text:"Flo"

from:21/09/1991 till:22/09/1991 color:TD text:"TD"

barset:break

from:22/09/1991 till:29/09/1991 color:TY text:"Gene"

from:30/09/1991 till:08/10/1991 color:TY text:"Hattie"

from:01/10/1991 till:03/10/1991 color:TS text:"Ira"

from:12/10/1991 till:14/10/1991 color:TD text:"Jeana"

from:15/10/1991 till:22/10/1991 color:TY text:"Kyle"

from:16/10/1991 till:19/10/1991 color:TS text:"Lola"

from:06/11/1991 till:15/11/1991 color:VSTY text:"Mike"

from:09/11/1991 till:12/11/1991 color:ST text:"Nell"

from:15/11/1991 till:17/11/1991 color:TD text:"Susang"

from:16/11/1991 till:18/11/1991 color:TD text:"TD"

from:20/11/1991 till:04/12/1991 color:VSTY text:"Owen"

from:21/11/1991 till:28/11/1991 color:VITY text:"Page"

from:13/12/1991 till:23/12/1991 color:VSTY text:"Russ"

bar:Month width:5 align:center fontsize:S shift:(0,-20) anchor:middle color:canvas

from:01/01/1991 till:01/02/1991 text:January

from:01/02/1991 till:01/03/1991 text:February

from:01/03/1991 till:01/04/1991 text:March

from:01/04/1991 till:01/05/1991 text:April

from:01/05/1991 till:01/06/1991 text:May

from:01/06/1991 till:01/07/1991 text:June

from:01/07/1991 till:01/08/1991 text:July

from:01/08/1991 till:01/09/1991 text:August

from:01/09/1991 till:01/10/1991 text:September

from:01/10/1991 till:01/11/1991 text:October

from:01/11/1991 till:01/12/1991 text:November

from:01/12/1991 till:01/01/1992 text:December

Systems

41 tropical cyclones formed this year in the Western Pacific, of which 31 became tropical storms. 19 storms reached typhoon intensity, of which 4 reached super typhoon strength.

= Severe Tropical Storm Koryn =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Koryn Jan 15 1990 0300Z.png

|Track=Koryn 1990 track.png

|Formed=January 12

|Dissipated=January 17

|10-min winds=55

|1-min winds=75

|Pressure=980

}}

On January 12, both the JMA and the JTWC identified a tropical depression in the northwest Pacific Ocean.{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I8sWC3XE4HAC&q=Severe+Tropical+storm+koryn+1991 |title=Climate System Monitoring (CSM) Monthly Bulletin |date=1993 |publisher=World Climate Programme |language=en}} The depression intensified over the period of a day to become a tropical storm on January 13, when it received the name Koryn from the JTWC. According to them, but not the JMA, Koryn reached typhoon strength on January 15, when it peaked in intensity. The storm then weakened quite rapidly until it became extratropical on January 17, at 0000 UTC.{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1tMtfaYcGz4C&dq=Severe+Tropical+storm+koryn&pg=RA2-PA65 |title=Mariners Weather Log |date=1990 |publisher=U.S. Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Environmental Data and Information Service. |language=en}}

{{Clear}}

= Tropical Storm Lewis =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Lewis may 1 1990 0412Z.jpg

|Track=Lewis 1990 track.png

|Formed=April 26

|Dissipated=May 3

|10-min winds=35

|1-min winds=35

|Pressure=998

}}

Tropical Storm Lewis was a minimal tropical storm that only held said intensity for two days staying in the ocean

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Marian =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Marian May 17 1990 1152Z.png

|Track=Marian 1990 track.png

|Formed=May 14

|Dissipated=May 19

|10-min winds=70

|1-min winds=90

|Pressure=965

}}

Marian was a typhoon in the South China Sea.

{{Clear}}

= CMA Tropical Depression 04 =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=CMA TD 04 May 20 1990 0548Z.png

|Track=CMA TD 4 1990 track.png

|WarningCenter=CMA

|Formed=May 20

|Dissipated=May 23

|10-min winds=30

|Pressure=1000

}}

{{Clear}}

= CMA Tropical Depression 05 =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=CMA TD 05 May 26 1990 0039Z.png

|Track=CMA TD 5 1990 track.png

|WarningCenter=CMA

|Formed=May 24

|Dissipated=May 28

|10-min winds=30

|Pressure=1000

}}

{{Clear}}

= Tropical Depression 04W =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=04W Jun 15 1990 0609Z.png

|WarningCenter=HKO

|Track=04W 1990 track.png

|Formed=June 14

|Dissipated=June 16

|10-min winds=30

|1-min winds=30

|Pressure=995

}}

04W was short-lived.

{{Clear}}

= Severe Tropical Storm Nathan (Akang) =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Nathan Jun 17 1990 1146Z.png

|Track=Nathan 1990 track.png

|Formed=June 14

|Dissipated=June 19

|10-min winds=55

|1-min winds=55

|Pressure=980

}}

A tropical disturbance trekked across the Philippines in mid June, upon entering the South China Sea a depression formed. The depression was upgraded to Tropical Storm Nathan on June 16. Tropical Storm Nathan reached peak intensity of 65 mph (100 km/h) shortly before striking Hainan Island. In the South China Sea the Chinese ship Tien Fu sank killing 4 people. In southern China torrential rains caused flooding in Guangdong Province killing 10 people, two people drowned in Macau due to high waves. Tropical Storm Nathan then continued northwestwards making a final landfall near the Vietnam/China border.Joint Typhoon Warning Center. {{cite web |title=SUMMARY OF WESTERN NORTH PACIFIC AND NORTH INDIAN OCEAN TROPICAL CYCLONE |url=http://www.usno.navy.mil/NOOC/nmfc-ph/RSS/jtwc/atcr/1990atcr/pdf/chapter3.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110607023342/http://www.usno.navy.mil/NOOC/nmfc-ph/RSS/jtwc/atcr/1990atcr/pdf/chapter3.pdf |archive-date=2011-06-07 |access-date=2010-01-01}} Retrieved on 2007-12-26.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Ofelia (Bising) =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Ofelia Jun 22 1990 2358Z.png

|Track=Ofelia 1990 track.png

|Formed=June 16

|Dissipated=June 25

|10-min winds=65

|1-min winds=90

|Pressure=970

}}

{{main|Typhoon Ofelia}}

The monsoon trough spawned a tropical depression east of the Philippines on June 15. It tracked to the northwest then westward, slowly organizing into a tropical storm on June 18. Ofelia turned more to the northwest and became a typhoon on June 20. Paralleling the east coast of the Philippines, it reached a peak of 100 mph (155 km/h) winds before hitting Taiwan on June 23. Ofelia weakened over the country, and brushed eastern China before dissipating on June 25 near Korea. Ofelia caused heavy flooding throughout its track, resulting in at least 64 casualties.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Percy (Klaring) =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Percy Jun 24 1990 2315Z.png

|Track=Percy 1990 track.png

|Formed=June 20

|Dissipated=June 30

|10-min winds=80

|1-min winds=115

|Pressure=950

}}

{{Main|Typhoon Percy (1990)}}

Typhoon Percy, which developed on June 20, reached a peak of 135 mph winds while located a short distance east of the northern Philippines. Increasing vertical shear weakened Percy to a 95 mph typhoon before crossing extreme northern Luzon on the 27th, an area that felt the effects of Ofelia only days before. It remained a weak typhoon until hitting southeastern China on the 29th before dissipating on the 1st. Percy caused serious damage and flooding in the Carolina Islands and northern Philippines, amounting to 9 deaths.

{{Clear}}

= Tropical Storm Robyn (Deling) =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Robyn Jul 10 1990 0500Z.png

|Track=Robyn 1990 track.png

|Formed=July 4

|Dissipated=July 13

|10-min winds=45

|1-min winds=45

|Pressure=992

}}

The outskirts of the storm brought {{convert|244|mm|in|abbr=on}} of rainfall to Vladivostok in the Russian Far East.{{cite news|agency=Russian News Agency|title=Powerful Typhoon Goni targets Russia as forecasted|date=August 26, 2015}}{{subscription required|via=Lexis Nexis}}

{{Clear}}

= CMA Tropical Depression 11 =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|WarningCenter=CMA

|Basin=WPac

|Image=CMA TD 11 Jul 22 1990 0600Z.png

|Track=CMA 11W 1990 track.png

|Formed=July 20

|Dissipated=July 23

|10-min winds=30

|1-min winds=

|Pressure=1000

}}

CMA 11 was a short lived system which hit Vietnam, bringing heavy rains, overall minimal damage.

{{Clear}}

= Severe Tropical Storm Tasha (Emang) =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Tasha jul 30 1990 0622Z.jpg

|Track=Tasha 1990 track.png

|Formed=July 21

|Dissipated=July 31

|10-min winds=55

|1-min winds=55

|Pressure=980

}}

65 mph Tropical Storm Tasha, which developed on July 21 and meandered through the South China Sea, hit southern China on the 30th, 75 miles east of Hong Kong. The storm caused torrential flooding in southern China, causing widespread damage and 108 fatalities.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Steve =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Steve Jul 28 1990 0928Z.png

|Track=Steve 1990 track.png

|Formed=July 23

|Dissipated=August 2

|10-min winds=85

|1-min winds=115

|Pressure=940

}}

Steve recurved out at sea.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Vernon =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Vernon aug 1 1990 0419Z.jpg

|Track=Vernon 1990 track.png

|Formed=July 26

|Dissipated=August 5

|10-min winds=75

|1-min winds=95

|Pressure=955

}}

Vernon followed Steve's track.

{{Clear}}

= Severe Tropical Storm Winona =

{{main|Tropical Storm Winona (1990)}}

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Winona aug 10 1990 0424Z.jpg

|Track=Winona 1990 track.png

|Formed=August 4

|Dissipated=August 11

|10-min winds=60

|1-min winds=65

|Pressure=975

}}

The origins of Winona can be traced back to Severe Tropical Storm Tasha.

On August 2, the remnant low of Tasha, as a patch of thunderstorms over northeastern China, was pushed to the east by a weather front from the west. By August 4, Tasha entered the Yellow Sea, before being pushed south by an anticyclone off northeastern Korea, into the East China Sea.

Although the same system, Tasha was named Winona, as it started to strengthen into a tropical storm by August 7. It reached peak intensity with an eye-like feature on August 8, before landfalling over Japan the next day. Later, the remnants became extratropical.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Yancy (Gading) =

{{main|Typhoon Yancy (1990)}}

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Yancy Aug 18 1990 0600Z.png

|Track=Yancy 1990 track.png

|Formed=August 11

|Dissipated=August 23

|10-min winds=80

|1-min winds=90

|Pressure=950

}}

Typhoon Yancy killed 12 people in the Philippines after a landslide destroyed a dormitory. In China, severe damage occurred and at least 216 people were killed.{{cite web|url=https://apnews.com/081b7ae68b6bddce2da5f18ff039b653|title=Typhoon Yancy's Death Toll Reaches 216|work=www.apnewsarchive.com|date=Aug 29, 1990|access-date=2 February 2018}} 20 people were killed in Taiwan.{{cite book|author=Michael Allaby|title=Hurricanes|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HhFUU33cliIC&q=%22Typhoon+Yancy%22&pg=PA173|date=14 May 2014|publisher=Infobase Publishing|isbn=978-1-4381-0867-4|page=173}}

{{Clear}}

= Tropical Storm Aka =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small|Basin=WPac|Image=Aka Aug 13 1990 0600Z.png|Track=Aka 1990 track.png|Formed=August 13 (Entered basin)|Dissipated=August 15|10-min winds=40|1-min winds=40|Pressure=994}}On 15:00 UTC on August 13, a weakening Tropical Storm Aka crossed into the basin from the Central Pacific, resulting in the Central Pacific Hurricane Center (CPHC) passing its responsibility to the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC).{{Cite web |last= |first= |title=The 1990 Central Pacific Tropical Cyclone Season |url=http://www.prh.noaa.gov/cphc/summaries/1990.php|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180306071904/http://www.prh.noaa.gov/cphc/summaries/1990.php|url-status=dead|archive-date=2018-03-06|access-date=2024-01-25 |website=CENTRAL PACIFIC HURRICANE CENTER |language=EN-US}} The next day, the JTWC downgraded Aka into a tropical depression since it had lost convection due to persistent wind shear caused by a nearby TUTT. On 12:00 UTC on August 15, the JTWC issued the last warning on the system,{{fact|date=July 2024}} as it passed south of Wake Island.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Zola =

{{main||Typhoon Zola}}

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Zola Aug 21 1990 0600Z.png

|Track=Zola 1990 track.png

|Formed=August 15

|Dissipated=August 25

|10-min winds=75

|1-min winds=100

|Pressure=960

}}

On August 15, a large area of convection associated with the inflow of developing Typhoon Yancy was cut off, as Yancy was moving too fast to the west for the convection in the east to be absorbed into Yancy. By August 16, the convection developed a mid to low level circulation, and developed into tropical storm by August 18. Zola intensified into a typhoon by the next day, before reaching peak intensity on August 21. By the next day, Zola made landfall over Japan, before dissipating north of Japan.

High winds and heavy rains produced by the storm killed six people and injured 22 others in Japan.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Abe (Iliang) =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Abe aug 30 1990 0545Z.jpg

|Track=Abe 1990 track.png

|Formed=August 23

|Dissipated=September 2

|10-min winds=75

|1-min winds=90

|Pressure=955

}}

{{Main|Typhoon Abe (1990)}}

Forming on August 23 from a tropical disturbance, the depression which would eventually develop into Typhoon Abe initially tracked in a steady west-northwestward direction. As a result of an intense monsoon surge, the system's trajectory briefly changed to an eastward then northward path before returning to its original track. Abe only intensified by a small amount between 0000 UTC August 24 and 0600 UTC August 27 due to the disruptive effects of the surge, and on August 30, Abe peaked in intensity as a Category 2-equivalent typhoon on the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale. After peaking in intensity, Abe crossed the Ryukyu Islands and the East China Sea, making landfall in China where it affected the provinces of Zhejiang and Jiangsu before entering the Yellow Sea, crossing South Korea, and finally transitioning into an extratropical cyclone.{{cite report|title=1990 Annual Tropical Cyclone Report|url=http://www.usno.navy.mil/NOOC/nmfc-ph/RSS/jtwc/atcr/1990atcr.pdf|publisher=Joint Typhoon Warning Center|date=1991|access-date=August 19, 2014|location=Pearl Harbor, Hawaii|archive-date=October 19, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161019075456/http://www.usno.navy.mil/NOOC/nmfc-ph/RSS/jtwc/atcr/1990atcr.pdf|url-status=dead}}{{cite report|title=Tropical Cyclones in 1990|url=http://www.hko.gov.hk/publica/tc/tc1990.pdf|publisher=Royal Observatory|location=Hong Kong|date=February 1992|access-date=June 2, 2015|archive-date=October 23, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191023013334/https://www.hko.gov.hk/publica/tc/tc1990.pdf|url-status=dead}}

Typhoon Abe killed 108–195 people after it caused flooding and landslides in the Philippines and Taiwan, ravaged coastal areas of China, and brought high waves to Japan.{{cite report|title=Digital Typhoon: Weather Disaster Report (1990-936-12)|url=http://agora.ex.nii.ac.jp/cgi-bin/dt/report.pl?id=1990-936-12&lang=en|website=Digital Typhoon|publisher=National Institute of Informatics|access-date=June 6, 2015|language=ja}}{{cite journal|title=Commodity Briefs|page=9A|journal=The Journal of Commerce|via=LexisNexis|date=September 7, 1990|quote=The typhoon hit the major wheat, sugar and cotton growing provinces of Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Anhui, as well as the city of Shanghai, on Aug. 31-Sept. 3, killing 108 people and causing 3.5 billion yuan (4.7 yuan=US$ 1) worth of damage, the China Daily said.}} Abe, which is responsible for killing 108 in China, affected half of Zhejiang's land area and a fourth of its population, leaving thousands homeless and causing ¥3.5 billion yuan (RMB, $741.5–743 million USD) to be lost in damages.{{cite book|title=Mariners Weather Log: Winter 1991|publisher=National Oceanographic Data Center|volume=35|issue=1|pages=62 & 66|editor-last=DeAngelis|editor-first=Richard A.|date=February 1991|quote=There was no let–up as Abe came to life, on the 25th, 85 mi west southwest of Guam. Moving northward then west northwestward, Abe reached severe tropical storm strength on the 28th and became a typhoon the following day about 425 mi east southeast of Taipei. Abe moved across the Ryukyu Is and then made landfall about 150 mi south of Shanghai on the last day of the month." & "During Abe, one person was killed in Taiwan. On mainland China it was reported that 108 people lost their lives with another 40 reported missing. Zhejiang and Jiangsu provinces were hardest hit.}}{{cite news|title=Storm Death Toll Rises to 88|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/2557813/standardspeaker/|newspaper=Standard-Speaker|date=September 5, 1990|page=3|via=Newspapers.com|access-date=June 5, 2015}} {{Open access}} Additional damage and one fatality occurred in Okinawa Prefecture in Japan, where at least ¥890 million yen (JPY, US$6 million) in damage was caused.{{cite report|title=Digital Typhoon: Weather Disaster Report (1990-918-06)|url=http://agora.ex.nii.ac.jp/cgi-bin/dt/report.pl?id=1990-918-06&lang=en|website=Digital Typhoon|publisher=National Institute of Informatics|access-date=June 6, 2015|language=ja}}{{cite report|title=Digital Typhoon: Weather Disaster Report (1990-927-02)|url=http://agora.ex.nii.ac.jp/cgi-bin/dt/report.pl?id=1990-927-02&lang=en|website=Digital Typhoon|publisher=National Institute of Informatics|access-date=June 6, 2015|language=ja}}

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Becky (Heling) =

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Becky Aug 28 1990 0605Z.png

|Track= Becky 1990 track.png

|Formed=August 23

|Dissipated=September 1

|1-min winds=70

|10-min winds=70

|Pressure=965

}}

Tropical Storm Becky, having developed on August 20, hit northern Luzon on the 26th as a strong tropical storm. It strengthened over the South China Sea to an 80 mph typhoon, and hit northern Vietnam at that intensity on the 29th. Becky was responsible for killing 32 people and causing heavy flooding.

{{Clear}}

= Tropical Storm Cecil =

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Cecil Sep 4 1990 0600Z.png

|Track=Cecil 1990 track.png

|Formed=September 2

|Dissipated=September 4

|1-min winds=45

|10-min winds=

|Type1=nwpdepression

|Pressure=1002

}}

Cecil hit China.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Dot (Loleng) =

{{Infobox Hurricane Small

|Basin=WPac

|Formed=September 3

|Dissipated=September 11

|Image=Dot sept 7 1990 0557Z.jpg

|Track=Dot 1990 track.png

|10-min winds=75

|1-min winds=75

|Pressure=960

}}

Typhoon Dot formed from a monsoon trough to the southwest of Guam. Dot moved steadily towards the northwest and strengthened into a typhoon. Typhoon Dot reached peak intensity of 85 mph before weakening slight before landfall on eastern Taiwan on 7 September. After passing Taiwan Dot regained typhoon intensity in the Formosa Strait before making a final landfall in Fujian Province, China. On northern Luzon Island rains from Typhoon Dot caused floods killing 4 people, on Taiwan 3 people died.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Ed (Miding) =

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Ed Sep 17 1990 0033Z.png

|Track=Ed 1990 track.png

|Formed=September 9

|Dissipated=September 20

|1-min winds=90

|10-min winds=70

|Pressure=965

}}

Severe flooding produced by the storm killed at least 18 people in Vietnam. At least 4,500 homes were destroyed and another 140,000 were inundated.[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=BQIQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ZZADAAAAIBAJ&pg=3560,3279443&dq=typhoon+ed+1990&hl=en] {{Dead link|date=February 2018}}

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Flo (Norming) =

{{main|Typhoon Flo (1990)}}

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=File:Flo sept 17 1990 0548Z.jpg

|Track=Flo 1990 track.png

|Formed=September 12

|Dissipated=September 23

|10-min winds=120

|1-min winds=145

|Pressure=890

}}

Typhoon Flo, which developed on September 12, rapidly intensified on the 16th and 17th to a 165 mph super typhoon near Okinawa. Vertical shear weakened it as it recurved to the northeast, and Flo hit Honshū, Japan, on the 19th as a 100 mph typhoon. It continued rapidly northeastward, became extratropical on the 20th, and dissipated on the 22nd. Widespread flooding and landslides killed 32 and caused millions in damage.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Gene (Oyang) =

{{main|Typhoon Gene}}

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Gene Sep 28 1990 0528Z.png

|Track=Gene 1990 track.png

|Formed=September 22

|Dissipated=September 29

|1-min winds=80

|10-min winds=80

|Pressure=950

}}

A tropical disturbance consolidated into a tropical depression on the 23rd of September to the east of the Philippines. Tropical Storm Gene was named as the storm moved towards the northwest and strengthened into a typhoon the next day. Typhoon Gene reached peak intensity of 95 mph on the 27th shortly before recurving towards the northeast. Gene then skimmed the coasts of Kyūshū, Shikoku and Honshū Islands in Japan before moving out to sea and turning extratropical. Winds on 85 mph were recorded on Kyūshū and heavy rains fell across the region, resulting floods and landslides killed 4 people.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Hattie (Pasing) =

{{main|Typhoon Hattie}}

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Hattie oct 5 1990 0551Z.jpg

|Track=Hattie 1990 track.png

|Formed=September 30

|Dissipated=October 8

|1-min winds=90

|10-min winds=80

|Pressure=950

}}

Typhoon Hattie formed as Typhoon Gene was accelerating towards Japan. Hattie strengthened into a typhoon on 3 October while moving towards the northwest and reached a peak intensity of 105 mph the next day. Typhoon Hattie began to recurve while west of the island of Okinawa. Heavy rains from Typhoons Flo, Gene and Hattie broke the drought that plagued the island. As Hattie accelerated towards Japan it was downgraded to a tropical storm before brushing pass Kyūshū and Shikoku before making landfall on Honshū Island. Heavy rains caused a landslide on Shikoku Island killing three people when a landslide hit a bus.

{{Clear}}

= Tropical Storm Ira =

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Ira oct 12 1990 0622Z.jpg

|Track=Ira 1990 track.png

|Formed=October 1

|Dissipated=October 5

|1-min winds=35

|10-min winds=35

|Pressure=996

}}

Severe flooding in Thailand triggered by heavy rains from Ira killed at least 24 people.{{cite news|url=https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/60165154.html?dids=60165154:60165154&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Oct+14%2C+1990&author=&pub=Los+Angeles+Times+(pre-1997+Fulltext)&desc=Thailand+Floods+Kill+24&pqatl=google|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121023100456/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/60165154.html?dids=60165154:60165154&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Oct+14,+1990&author=&pub=Los+Angeles+Times+(pre-1997+Fulltext)&desc=Thailand+Floods+Kill+24&pqatl=google|url-status=dead|archive-date=October 23, 2012|title=Thailand Floods Kill 24|work=Los Angeles Times|date=Oct 14, 1990}}

{{Clear}}

= Tropical Storm Jeana =

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Jeana Oct 12 1990 1850Z.png

|Track=Jeana 1990 track.png

|Formed=October 12

|Dissipated=October 14

|10-min winds=

|1-min winds=35

|Pressure=1004

|Type1=nwpdepression

}}

Jeana hit southeast Asia.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Kyle =

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Kyle Oct 21 1990 0434Z.png

|Track=Kyle 1990 track.png

|Formed=October 14

|Dissipated=October 22

|1-min winds=90

|10-min winds=75

|Pressure=955

}}

A category 2 typhoon which did not impact land directly. It formed on October 14 and was classified as a Tropical Depression. It became a tropical storm and a typhoon later. Kyle reached a peak intensity of a Category 2 typhoon on September 20. Then, the storm turned eastward instead of affecting Japan. It stated to weaken and was classified as a tropical storm and eventually dissipated on the 22nd. Kyle did not cause any deaths or damages.

{{Clear}}

= Tropical Storm Lola =

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Lola oct 18 1990 0647Z.jpg

|Track=Lola 1990 track.png

|Formed=October 16

|Dissipated=October 20

|1-min winds=40

|10-min winds=35

|Pressure=998

}}

Extreme rainfall, peaking near {{convert|31.5|in|mm|abbr=on}} triggered extensive flooding that left some regions under {{convert|6|ft|m|abbr=on}} of water. At least 16 people were killed by the storm.{{cite news|url=http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=LB&p_theme=lb&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EAE8CA67548C254&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM|title=DIGEST: FLOODS DEVASTATE CENTRAL VIETNAM|date=October 24, 1990|work= Press-Telegram (Long Beach, CA)}}

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Mike (Ruping) =

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Mike 1990-11-10 2300Z.png

|Track=Mike 1990 path.png|colors = new

|Formed=November 6

|Dissipated=November 15

|10-min winds=100

|1-min winds=150

|Pressure=915

}}

{{Main|Typhoon Mike}}

Super Typhoon Mike was the deadliest typhoon of the season. It struck the central Philippines in mid-November, where landslides, flooding, and extreme wind damage to caused over 748 casualties and over $1.94 billion in damage (1990 USD).{{cite web|url=http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/cab/dtc_11.htm |title = Most Destructive Tropical Cyclones for Month of November (1948-2000) | access-date = 2007-02-04 | work = PAGASA|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060925132930/http://www.pagasa.dost.gov.ph/cab/dtc_11.htm |archive-date = 2006-09-25 }} The name Mike was retired after this season and replaced with Manny.

{{Clear}}

= Severe Tropical Storm Nell =

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Nell Nov 11 1990 0600Z.png

|Track=Nell 1990 track.png

|Formed=November 9

|Dissipated=November 12

|1-min winds=50

|10-min winds=50

|Pressure=990

}}

Nell also hit southeast Asia.

{{Clear}}

= Tropical Depression Susang =

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=

|Track=

|Formed=November 15

|Dissipated=November 17

|1-min winds=

|10-min winds=30

|Pressure=1004

}}

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Owen (Uding) =

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Owen nov 27 1990 0422Z.jpg

|Track=Owen 1990 path.png

|Formed=November 20

|Dissipated=December 4

|1-min winds=140

|10-min winds=95

|Pressure=925

}}

As Super Typhoon Owen crossed the Marshall Islands and Caroline Islands in mid to late November, it caused extreme damage to the many islands. Some islands lost 95%-99% of the dwellings, as well as 80-90% crops being destroyed. Through all of the damage, Owen only killed 2 people.Japan Meteorological Agency. [http://www.jma.go.jp/jma/jma-eng/jma-center/rsmc-hp-pub-eg/Besttracks/bst9099.txt Japan Meteorological Agency's Typhoons' Best Track (1990-1999).] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130122183440/http://www.jma.go.jp/jma/jma-eng/jma-center/rsmc-hp-pub-eg/Besttracks/bst9099.txt |date=2013-01-22 }} Retrieved on 2015-01-05.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Page (Tering) =

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Track=Page 1990 path.png

|Image=Page 1990-11-27 0600Z.png

|Formed=November 21

|Dissipated=November 28

|1-min winds=140

|10-min winds=105

|Pressure=910

}}

{{main|Typhoon Page}}

Super Typhoon Page formed on November 21 as a tropical depression. From there, it tracked slowly westward, making a cyclonic loop. Page continued westward, and strengthened into a Category 5 typhoon. It then accelerated northeastward, making landfall in Japan on November 30 as a Category 1 typhoon. Page dissipated over northeast Japan on December 3.

{{Clear}}

= Typhoon Russ =

{{Infobox hurricane small

|Basin=WPac

|Image=Russ Dec 18 1990 1630Z.png

|Track=Russ 1990 track.png

|Formed=December 13

|Dissipated=December 23

|1-min winds=125

|10-min winds=100

|Pressure=915

}}

The final storm of the season, Russ, formed on December 13. The typhoon brought heavy damage to Guam when it passed near the island on December 20. Damage estimates ranged as high as $120 million (1990 USD),{{Citation needed|date=May 2010}} but nobody perished in the storm.

{{Clear}}

Storm names

{{See also|Lists of tropical cyclone names|Tropical cyclone naming}}

During the season 30 named tropical cyclones developed in the Western Pacific and were named by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center, when it was determined that they had become tropical storms. These names were contributed to a revised list which started on mid-1989.

class="wikitable"
KorynLewisMarianNathanOfeliaPercyRobynSteveTashaVernonWinonaYancyZolaAbeBecky
CecilDotEdFloGeneHattieIraJeanaKyleLolaMikeNellOwenPageRuss

= Philippines =

class="wikitable" align=right
AkangBisingKlaringDelingEmang
GadingHelingIliangLolengMiding
NormingOyangPasingRupingSusang
TeringUding{{tcname unused|Weling}}{{tcname unused|Yaning}}
colspan=5|Auxiliary list
{{tcname unused|Aning}}
{{tcname unused|Bidang}}{{tcname unused|Katring}}{{tcname unused|Delang}}{{tcname unused|Esang}}{{tcname unused|Garding}}

The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration uses its own naming scheme for tropical cyclones in their area of responsibility. PAGASA assigns names to tropical depressions that form within their area of responsibility and any tropical cyclone that might move into their area of responsibility. Should the list of names for a given year prove to be insufficient, names are taken from an auxiliary list, the first 10 of which are published each year before the season starts. Names not retired from this list will be used again in the 1994 season. This is the same list used for the 1986 season. PAGASA uses its own naming scheme that starts in the Filipino alphabet, with names of Filipino female names ending with "ng" (A, B, K, D, etc.). Names that were not assigned/going to use are marked in {{tcname unused}}.

{{clear}}

= Retirement =

Due to the severity of damage and loss of life caused by Mike, the name was retired and was replaced with Manny and was first used in the 1993 season. PAGASA also retired the name Ruping for similar reasons and was replaced with Ritang for the 1994 season.

Season effects

This table summarizes all the systems that developed within or moved into the North Pacific Ocean, to the west of the International Date Line during 1990. The tables also provide an overview of a systems intensity, duration, land areas affected and any deaths or damages associated with the system.

{{Pacific areas affected (Top)}}

|-

| Koryn || {{Sort|900112|January 12 – 16}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|2|Severe tropical storm}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|100|100 km/h (65 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|0980|980 hPa (28.94 inHg)}} || Caroline Islands, Mariana Islands || None || None ||

|-

| Lewis || {{Sort|900428|April 28 – May 4}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|1|Tropical storm}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|065|65 km/h (40 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|0998|998 hPa (29.47 inHg)}} || Caroline Islands || {{ntsh|0}} None || None ||

|-

| Marian || {{Sort|900514|May 14 – 19}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|130|130 km/h (80 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0965|965 hPa (28.50 inHg)}} || Philippines, Taiwan || None || None ||

|-

| TD || {{Sort|900520|May 20 – 23}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|0|Tropical depression}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|045|Not specified}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|1004|1004 hPa (29.65 inHg)}} || Philippines || None || None ||

|-

| TD || {{Sort|900527|May 27 – 28}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|0|Tropical depression}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|045|Not specified}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|1006|1006 hPa (29.71 inHg)}} || South China || None || None ||

|-

| TD || {{Sort|900531|May 31 – June 1}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|0|Tropical depression}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|045|Not specified}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|1004|1004 hPa (29.65 inHg)}} || None || None || None ||

|-

| 04W || {{Sort|900613|June 13 – 15}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|0|Tropical depression}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|055|55 km/h (35 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|1002|1002 hPa (29.59 inHg)}} || None || None || None ||

|-

| Nathan (Akang) || {{Sort|900613|June 13 – 19}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|2|Severe tropical storm}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|100|100 km/h (65 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|0980|980 hPa (28.94 inHg)}} || Philippines, South China, Vietnam || None || {{nts|12}} ||

|-

| Ofelia (Bising) || {{Sort|900616|June 16 – 25}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|120|120 km/h (75 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0970|970 hPa (28.65 inHg)}} || Philippines, Taiwan, East China, Korean Peninsula || {{ntsp|207000000||$}} || {{nts|96}} ||

|-

| Percy (Klaring) || {{Sort|900620|June 20 – 30}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|150|150 km/h (90 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0950|950 hPa (28.05 inHg)}} || Caroline Islands, Philippines, China, Taiwan || None || {{nts|25}} ||

|-

| TD || {{Sort|900701|July 1 – 2}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|0|Tropical depression}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|045|Not specified}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|1006|1006 hPa (29.71 inHg)}} || Philippines || None || None ||

|-

| Robyn (Deling) || {{Sort|900704|July 4 – 12}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|1|Tropical storm}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|085|85 km/h (50 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|0992|992 hPa (29.29 inHg)}} || Philippines, Taiwan, Ryukyu Islands, South Korea || {{ntsh|0}} None || None ||

|-

| TD || {{Sort|900716|July 16 – 17}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|0|Tropical depression}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|045|Not specified}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|1008|1008 hPa (29.77 inHg)}} || None || None || None ||

|-

| TD || {{Sort|900721|July 21 – 23}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|0|Tropical depression}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|045|Not specified}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|1002|1002 hPa (29.59 inHg)}} || Vietnam || Minimal || None ||

|-

| Tasha (Emang) || {{Sort|900722|July 22 – August 1}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|2|Severe tropical storm}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|100|100 km/h (65 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|0980|980 hPa (28.94 inHg)}} || Philippines, South China, Vietnam || None || {{nts|108}} ||

|-

| Steve || {{Sort|900723|July 23 – August 2}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|155|155 km/h (100 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0940|940 hPa (27.76 inHg)}} || Mariana Islands || None || None ||

|-

| Vernon || {{Sort|900728|July 28 – August 9}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|140|140 km/h (85 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0955|955 hPa (28.20 inHg)}} || None || None || None ||

|-

| Winona || {{Sort|900804|August 4 – 11}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|2|Severe tropical storm}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|110|110 km/h (70 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|0975|975 hPa (28.79 inHg)}} || Japan || {{ntsp|60300000||$}} || {{nts|1}} ||

|-

| Yancy (Gading) || {{Sort|900811|August 11 – 22}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|150|150 km/h (90 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0950|950 hPa (28.05 inHg)}} || Caroline Islands, Mariana Islands, Taiwan, China || {{ntsp|384000000||$}} || {{nts|284}} ||

|-

| Aka || {{Sort|900813|August 13 – 15}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|1|Tropical storm}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|075|75 km/h (45 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|0994|994 hPa (29.35 inHg)}} || Marshall Islands || {{ntsh|0}} None || None ||

|-

| Zola || {{Sort|900816|August 16 – 23}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|140|140 km/h (85 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0960|960 hPa (28.35 inHg)}} || Mariana Islands, Japan || {{ntsp|104000000||$}} || {{nts|6}} ||

|-

| Abe (Iliang) || {{Sort|900824|August 24 – September 1}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|140|140 km/h (85 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0955|955 hPa (28.20 inHg)}} || Caroline Islands, Mariana Islands, Ryukyu Islands, Taiwan, East China, Korean Peninsula || {{ntsp|748000000||$}} || {{nts|195}} ||

|-

| Becky (Heling) || {{Sort|900823|August 24 – 30}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|130|130 km/h (80 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0965|965 hPa (28.50 inHg)}} || Philippines, South China, Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, Burma || None || {{nts|32}} ||

|-

| Cecil || {{Sort|900902|September 2 – 4}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|0|Tropical storm}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|085|85 km/h (50 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|1002|1002 hPa (29.59 inHg)}} || Taiwan, East China || {{ntsh|0}} None || None ||

|-

| Dot (Loleng) || {{Sort|900903|September 3 – 10}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|140|140 km/h (85 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0960|960 hPa (28.35 inHg)}} || Mariana Islands, Philippines, China, Taiwan || None || {{nts|7}} ||

|-

| Ed (Miding) || {{Sort|900909|September 9 – 20}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|130|130 km/h (80 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0965|965 hPa (28.50 inHg)}} || Mariana Islands, Philippines, Vietnam, South China || None || {{nts|18}} ||

|-

| Flo (Norming) || {{Sort|900912|September 12 – 20}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VITY}}|{{Sort|5|Violent typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VITY}}|{{Sort|220|220 km/h (140 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VITY}}|{{Sort|0890|890 hPa (26.28 inHg)}} || Caroline Islands, Mariana Islands, Japan || {{ntsp|918000000||$}} || {{nts|40}} ||

|-

| TD || {{Sort|900921|September 21 – 22}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|0|Tropical depression}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|045|Not specified}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|1008|1008 hPa (29.77 inHg)}} || Philippines || None || None ||

|-

| Gene (Oyang) || {{Sort|900922|September 22 – 30}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|150|150 km/h (90 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0950|950 hPa (28.05 inHg)}} || Japan || {{ntsp|158000000||$}} || {{nts|6}} ||

|-

| Hattie (Pasing) || {{Sort|900930|September 30 – October 8}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|150|150 km/h (90 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0950|950 hPa (28.05 inHg)}} || Japan || {{ntsp|9900000||$}} || {{nts|3}} ||

|-

| Ira || {{Sort|901001|October 1 – 3}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|1|Tropical storm}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|065|65 km/h (40 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|0996|996 hPa (29.41 inHg)}} || Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Myanmar || {{ntsh|0}} None || {{nts|24}} ||

|-

| Jeana || {{Sort|901012|October 12 – 14}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|0|Tropical storm}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|085|85 km/h (50 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|1002|1002 hPa (29.59 inHg)}} || Vietnam, Cambodia || {{ntsh|0}} None || None ||

|-

| Kyle || {{Sort|901015|October 15 – 22}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|3|Typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|140|140 km/h (85 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TY}}|{{Sort|0955|955 hPa (28.20 inHg)}} || Mariana Islands || None || None ||

|-

| Lola || {{Sort|901016|October 16 – 19}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|1|Tropical storm}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|065|65 km/h (40 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|storm}}|{{Sort|0998|998 hPa (29.47 inHg)}} || Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Myanmar || {{ntsh|0}} None || {{nts|16}} ||

|-

| Mike (Ruping) || {{Sort|901106|November 6 – 18}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VSTY}}|{{Sort|4|Very strong typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VSTY}}|{{Sort|185|185 km/h (115 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VSTY}}|{{Sort|0915|915 hPa (27.02 inHg)}} || Caroline Islands, Philippines, Vietnam, South China || {{ntsp|448000000||$}} || {{nts|816}} ||

|-

| Nell || {{Sort|901109|November 9 – 12}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|2|Severe tropical storm}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|095|95 km/h (60 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|STS}}|{{Sort|0990|990 hPa (29.23 inHg)}} || Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand || None || Unknown ||

|-

| Susang || {{Sort|901115|November 15 – 17}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|0|Tropical depression}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|045|Not specified}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|1004|1004 hPa (29.65 inHg)}} || Philippines || None || None ||

|-

| TD || {{Sort|901116|November 16 – 18}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|0|Tropical depression}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|045|Not specified}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|TD}}|{{Sort|1004|1004 hPa (29.65 inHg)}} || Caroline Islands || None || None ||

|-

| Owen (Uding) || {{Sort|901120|November 20 – December 4}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VSTY}}|{{Sort|4|Very strong typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VSTY}}|{{Sort|175|175 km/h (110 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VSTY}}|{{Sort|0925|925 hPa (27.32 inHg)}} || Marshall Islands, Caroline Islands || None || {{nts|2}} ||

|-

| Page (Tering) || {{Sort|901121|November 21 – 30}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VITY}}|{{Sort|5|Violent typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VITY}}|{{Sort|195|195 km/h (120 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VITY}}|{{Sort|0910|910 hPa (26.87 inHg)}} || Caroline Islands, Philippines, Japan || {{ntsp|33000000||$}} || {{nts|4}} ||

|-

| Russ || {{Sort|901213|December 13 – 23}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VSTY}}|{{Sort|4|Very strong typhoon}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VSTY}}|{{Sort|185|185 km/h (115 mph)}} || bgcolor=#{{storm colour|VSTY}}|{{Sort|0915|915 hPa (27.02 inHg)}} || Marshall Islands, Mariana Islands, Caroline Islands || {{ntsp|120000000||$}} || None ||

|-

{{TC Areas affected (Bottom)|TC's=41 systems|dates=January 12 – December 23, 1990|winds={{Sort|220|220 km/h (140 mph)}}|pres={{Sort|0890|890 hPa (26.28 inHg)}}|damage={{ntsp|6490700000||$}}|deaths=1,789|Refs=}}

See also

{{Portal|Tropical cyclones}}

References

{{Reflist}}