"Nesat" redirects here. For the German-Turkish footballer, see
Neşat Gülünoğlu.
The name Nesat has been used to name four
tropical cyclones in the western north Pacific Ocean. The name was submitted by
Cambodia and means fishing.
Typhoon Nesat (2005) (T0504, 04W, Dante) – a powerful typhoon which approached
Japan but eventually stayed at sea.
Typhoon Nesat (2011) (T1117, 20W, Pedring) – a strong typhoon which severely impacted the
Philippines and
South China, killing 98 people and causing $2.12 billion worth of damage.
Typhoon Nesat (2017) (T1709, 11W, Gorio) — a typhoon which claimed 3 lives and caused $282.3 million worth of damage after impacting Taiwan and East China.
Typhoon Nesat (2022) (T2220, 23W, Neneng) — a typhoon that affected the Philippines,
Taiwan and
Vietnam, but caused no fatalities along its path.
This
article includes a list of named storms that share the same name (or similar names). If an
internal link incorrectly led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended storm article.
"Nesat" redirects here. For the German-Turkish footballer, see
Neşat Gülünoğlu.
The name Nesat has been used to name four
tropical cyclones in the western north Pacific Ocean. The name was submitted by
Cambodia and means fishing.
Typhoon Nesat (2005) (T0504, 04W, Dante) – a powerful typhoon which approached
Japan but eventually stayed at sea.
Typhoon Nesat (2011) (T1117, 20W, Pedring) – a strong typhoon which severely impacted the
Philippines and
South China, killing 98 people and causing $2.12 billion worth of damage.
Typhoon Nesat (2017) (T1709, 11W, Gorio) — a typhoon which claimed 3 lives and caused $282.3 million worth of damage after impacting Taiwan and East China.
Typhoon Nesat (2022) (T2220, 23W, Neneng) — a typhoon that affected the Philippines,
Taiwan and
Vietnam, but caused no fatalities along its path.
This
article includes a list of named storms that share the same name (or similar names). If an
internal link incorrectly led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended storm article.