The strongest global storm in 2022 drove across the East China Sea, threatening the southern islands of Japan and risking wild winds along the east coast of China. Super Typhoon Hinnamnor is currently packaging a sustainable wind of about 160 miles (257 kilometers) per hour and has a gust of more than 195 miles per hour, according to the US Typhoon Commemoration Center. The maximum significant wave height is 50 feet (15 meters).
Hinnamnor will be the strongest storm in 2022 based on the maximum sustainable wind speed recorded at this time, according to an official at the Japanese Meteorology Agency. Hong Kong’s observatory said at 10 am, the typhoon was centered about 230 kilometers east of Japan Okinawa and was expected to move west-west power about 22 kilometers per hour to the Ryukyu Islands.
US JTWC estimates that the super -winding typhoon will lose some of its strength over the next few days. Everything is somewhat calmer in Atlantic, where a continuous period of calm places the area between Africa and the Caribbean, known as Alley Hurricane, on the path for August that is the quietest – usually the beginning of the most active phase of the storm season – in 25 years. The sea stretch only has two August without a storm in more than seven decades of recording – one in 1961 and the other in 1997, said Phil Klotzbach, writer of the seasonal storm forecast at Colorado State University.