List of storms named Maring
The name Maring has been used for sixteen tropical cyclones in the Philippines by PAGASA in the Western Pacific Ocean.
- Tropical Depression Maring (1964)
- Typhoon Della (1968) (T6816, 20W, Maring) – made landfall on Miyakojima and Kyūshū in Japan.
- Typhoon Betty (1972) (T7214, 14W, Maring) – traversed the southern Ryukyu Islands, passed just north of Taiwan and struck China.
- Typhoon Anita (1976) (T7612, 12W, Maring) – struck Japan.
- Tropical Depression Maring (1980) (10W, Maring) – weak tropical depression which affected the Philippines and China.
- Typhoon June (1984) (T8412, 14W, Maring) – struck the northern part of Luzon claiming 121 lives, before making landfall in China.
- Tropical Storm Kit (Maring) (1988) (T8821, 17W, Maring) – made landfall on the extreme northern tip of Luzon Island and then Hong Kong.
- Typhoon Ted (1992) (T9219, 19W, Maring) – brushed Luzon, then hit southern Taiwan, eastern China, and South Korea, causing 61 deaths.
- Typhoon Sally (1996) (T9616, 23W, Maring) – a strong typhoon which brushed the northern portion of the Philippines and eventually made landfall in southern China, causing at least 140 fatalities.
- Typhoon Wukong (2000) (T0016, 23W, Maring) – struck Vietnam.
- Typhoon Haiyan (2001) (T0121, 25W, Maring) – hit Taiwan and the Ryukyu Islands.
- Typhoon Longwang (2005) (T0519, 19W, Maring) – triggered mudslides killing 95 in eastern China.
- Tropical Storm Mujigae (2009) (T0913, 14W, Maring) – hit Hainan and northern Vietnam.
- Tropical Storm Trami (2013) (T1312, 12W, Maring) – caused flooding in the Philippines.
- Typhoon Doksuri (2017) (T1719, 21W, Maring) – impacted the Philippines and Vietnam.
- Tropical Storm Kompasu (2021) (T2118, 24W, Maring) – a deadly and damaging storm which affected the Philippines, China and Hong Kong.
The name Maring was retired from use in the Philippine area of responsibility following the 2021 typhoon season, and will be replaced with Mirasol in the 2025 season.[1][2]
- De Vera-Ruiz, Ellalyn. "PAGASA replaces names of 3 destructive cyclones in 2021". Manila Bulletin. Archived from the original on March 22, 2022.
- "Philippine Tropical Cyclone Names". PAGASA. Archived from the original on March 21, 2022. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
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