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"The government has so far not estimated the cost of Otis, but Enki Research, which tracks tropical storms and models the cost of their damage, saw it "likely approaching $15 billion.""
I'd wait till the government's estimate comes out or some new source comes out with a preliminary estimate to put a damage cost (
talk)
02:04, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
@
TC Animates: The $15 billion is not a direct damage estimate. The sources I see fall short of claiming explicitly that $15 billion worth of property damage has occurred and therefore it is not possible for us to make bold claims like it being the most expensive Mexico or Pacific hurricane yet (
WP:NOR).--
Jasper Deng(talk)03:47, 29 October 2023 (UTC)reply
@
Jasper Deng: I set the damage as >1 billion per the Reuters source stating Otis caused billions in damage. I feel that would be a good starting point here and can always be changed later as new information comes out.
Noah,
AATalk12:23, 31 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Andrew as see also
@
AveryTheComrade: Andrew is the only other Category 5 hurricane to impact such a large metropolitan area at Category 5 intensity. Both were small but powerful storms of very similar size and both caused similarly devastating impacts. Your "totally irrelevant" does not stand up to scrutiny.
Jasper Deng(talk)05:29, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
If the only things necessary for a storm to be relevant to Otis are "Category 5" and "struck a large metropolitan area as a category 5" then there are at least a dozen more storms that can be added to See Also.
AveryTheComrade (
talk)
06:24, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
No. Give another example where a Cat 5 struck a densely populated area with many high-rise buildings. Andrew also was extremely similar meteorologically, much more so than other Category 5 hurricanes: exact same winds at landfall, pressure only one millibar different, very similar size.--
Jasper Deng(talk)06:27, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
To quote Masters: "This means that the most heavily developed areas of Acapulco (population just over 1 million) received the more powerful right-front winds of Otis, perhaps setting a record for the largest number of people ever to experience the eyewall of a Cat 5 storm. The only comparable case may be Hurricane Andrew of 1992, which hit South Florida as a Cat 5 with 165 mph winds." No other storm meets that criterion.--
Jasper Deng(talk)06:31, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I agree that Andrew should be included in the "See also" section, but how about Hurricane David and Typhoon Angela? Shouldn't they be included as well, given the fact that those two tropical cyclones were both Category 5s when they crossed Santo Domingo and Metro Manila respectively?
Vida0007 (
talk)
08:34, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I looked at the Spanish wikipedia page on Hurricane Otis. It also says there have been 80 deaths but the link to the source is broken.
Tajjc (
talk)
15:37, 28 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Here's the link:
[1]. It states that there's an additional 50 deaths, but that seems unofficial given that when translated to English, it states "casting doubt on the Mexican government's official figure, which reports only 27 people killed by the storm." In my opinion, I would update when the additional deaths are officially confirmed, but it seems like it isn't for now.
TailsWx15:44, 28 October 2023 (UTC)reply
@
Jasper Deng: I didn't change anything listed here other than remove the level 3 header, which I removed because I wanted to combine the paragraph with the deaths with general nationalwide statisics like I usually do when writing articles. I adhered to all your content principles.
YEPacificHurricane01:51, 29 October 2023 (UTC)reply
@
Yellow Evan: But the point of separating the casualties is due to the variation in death tolls and skepticism over the official one, so I don't think the paragraph should be combined. That's what we've agreed upon here.--
Jasper Deng(talk)02:57, 29 October 2023 (UTC)reply
At first the casualties section was appropriately written with sources explicitly saying reported deaths were not included in official tolls. However, since then there have been updates to the official tally and assumptions are being made that the reported deaths are still being excluded from the 48 confirmed deaths. We cannot say the 50 reported bodies recovered from the ocean are not part of the 48 confirmed if we don't have explicit confirmation of this. The passage of time has rendered that assumption invalid. This applies to all reported deaths that were made before updates to certified deaths. The certification process for deaths is known to take time. We can still include mention of reported deaths but they must be given appropriate context of when they were reported in relation to official tolls. We cannot make a statement of total deaths adding up reported deaths on top of the official tally, it's a blatant violation of
WP:OR and
WP:SYNTH. ~
Cyclonebiskit (
chat)
19:20, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
There is no reason bodies would not be reported until they are identified, considering there will be many that won't be, so there is no reason these will be only included in part by the government. Therefore, as 50 > 48, it is mathematically impossible for the rescuers' story to have been included and given that the 16 hospital deaths were of a cause different from water suffocation (drowning; that's what the government has described it as), they can't possibly have been included either.
WP:CALC, adding the numbers without giving a verdict on whether it is likely to be correct, is perfectly reasonable.--
Jasper Deng(talk)19:24, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
You're making an incredible leap to assume not a single person of those 50, reported when the official toll was 27, have not been included in the 48. The numbers are not mutually exclusive and without the source explicitly saying none of the 50 deaths have been confirmed you cannot make a separate "unofficial" tally. The 50 bodies recovered do not have a marked cause of death, they were just found in the water which can happen from various means in a multifaceted natural disaster.
WP:CALC does not apply without ample confirmation that the numbers are mutually exclusive. Just because 50 is greater than 48 it does not mean the 50 is entirely separate from the 48. The hospital deaths are a different situation as those were outright denied by the government. ~
Cyclonebiskit (
chat)
19:30, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
That's not an incredible assumption by any means. In a
plane crash, the death toll is given before anyone is identified (and thus certified) dead. Since @
CarterStormTracking: was originally in favor of this, they should also weigh in, but you're going to need a change of consensus to remove it.--
Jasper Deng(talk)19:34, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
It is without an explicit statement that none of the 50 deaths were officially confirmed in the three days since they were reported. You're inherently assuming that none are included because X is greater than Y. That's not a valid argument when context is of utmost importance here. The reported deaths from a plane crash are an entirely different situation as there is a definitive list of potential victims and simple math can be used. That is not the case here with over 1 million people affected. You cannot compare the two. ~
Cyclonebiskit (
chat)
19:39, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
The NPR article says they're not counted in the official tally. This is definitely comparable as a subincident of the disaster that happened at one place and time. Combined with media-reported skepticism of the official tallies, and your oft-ignored fact that there is quite literally no reason not to count the 50 (actually 70) bodies in whole, your argument does not stand. At this point, unless the others in this thread agree, your only option is a
WP:3O.--
Jasper Deng(talk)19:43, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
The
cited NPR article states the 50 were not included as of October 28 when the Government reported 27 deaths. Since then there have been another 21 certified deaths. The information is outdated, full stop. There has to be evidence that states none of the 50 deaths confirmed at the time of this discussion are included in the 48. You're making a further assumption that none of the 20 deaths seen by the person in the NPR article were included in the 50 reported "across the city". The article does not mention "70" at any point. And even then, the information will once again be outdated once the official toll updates. ~
Cyclonebiskit (
chat)
19:48, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
It is still not mathematically possible for them to have been included because they would've all been included. Once the official death toll reaches something where that is no longer the case (i.e. at least 77), then there's an argument to be made that it's outdated; until then, there is not. It's unlikely we are going to agree; wait until others comment to proceed further.--
Jasper Deng(talk)19:51, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Again, you're assuming mutual exclusivity without clear evidence. You're also making an assumption that the death certification process happens in bulk and all 50 bodies were processed and certified at the same time. Bodies can arrive at the morgue simultaneously and be certified at different times. The report doesn't even say the bodies were sent to a morgue, they just said they were found. There are far too many uncertainties and pieces to make such a claim with such confidence. ~
Cyclonebiskit (
chat)
20:00, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
We could say it was unknown at the time how many (if any) of the 50 deaths may be included in the official government figure.
Tajjc (
talk)
20:30, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I have to side with @
Cyclonebiskit here. It's not right to (A) make the assumption that various unofficial tallies of body recoveries do not overlap or to (B) sum them up and present it as an alternative possible death toll, even outside the lead for the infobox. More clarity regarding casualties will likely come with time. All the arguing and calculation will probably be redundant in a few days.
Penitentes (
talk)
19:54, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
This is a sensible stance, and as always care should be taken to faithfully represent reported information. There is no detailed enumeration of who and where the fatalities were, and cause of death, as
Cyclonebiskit (
talk·contribs) saliently identified. Adding the counts of recovered bodies which may or may not overlap with the official death toll is a simple exercise in
WP:CALC, but its placement here to suggest that they add in a mutually exclusive manner to a death toll of 141 (which is not listed anywhere) violates
WP:SYNTH. As an aside, a quick glance at the source for unofficial report by a Mexican soldier saying his unit had recovered 1 body and that local officials recovered 6 othersdoes not explicitly indicate whether these were part of the "official" death toll. —
TheAustinMan(
Talk ⬩
Edits)20:50, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Suitable high-resolution images of damage
Regarding damage(s): does anyone have a source that could provide suitable images for use on Wikimedia Commons? I would think that a subject of this magnitude would warrant one or two good images of the impact in Acapulco and its environs.
CapeVerdeWave (
talk)
16:24, 28 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Contact the photographers of images you've seen and ask them if they'd be willing to upload the images to Commons. You are almost certainly not going to find public domain or Creative Commons images anywhere.
AveryTheComrade (
talk)
18:32, 28 October 2023 (UTC)reply
would the 1.7 billion spent in relief count towards dmg totals in $?
Phil Klotzbach is a source. Not sure it is notable enough to be mentioned though, and in any case this record will not stand in post-analysis since 12z was revised upwards to 65 knots, cutting the intensification from 70 to 60 knots, and probably less in post-analysis.--
Jasper Deng(talk)08:14, 29 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Unsourced intro
The intro paragraphs are lacking some sources IMO, only having one that I've added at the moment. But I feel like most sources should be able to be found elsewhere in the article? Karagone🗨15:29, 29 October 2023 (UTC)reply
You are correct in that
WP:DATE doesn't require a year in a date. In fact, all of the "WP:" and "MOS:" articles are guidelines, not requirements. However, if someone were to read only a portion of the article that contains dates without the years, or extract it for use somewhere else (in this case, say an article like
Pacific hurricane, the information would be ambiguous and/or misleading if not totally incorrect. There is nothing wrong with using the full date, including the year any place a date is used. Including the year enhances the overall clarity of Wikipedia articles.
Truthanado (
talk)
01:34, 31 October 2023 (UTC)reply
There is something wrong, namely that we should not include redundant years that needlessly take up space. Note that the meteorological history section begins with a full date and does not use the year again, which is amply sufficient to establish 2023 as the year. This content will not be used anywhere else on Wikipedia that will not specify 2023. Convention in WPTC articles has always been to not redundantly add years to dates in storm articles, so you will need to discuss this at
WT:WPTC for consistency. Also, your argument could be used to establish that articles like the
1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo need to have the year in every date as well, which is clearly unwieldy.--
Jasper Deng(talk)04:25, 31 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I don't want to start an edit war but the source that was linked for the damages doesn't look concrete. The source itself does not mention that it is confirmed that the damage totals exceed 1B$ USD, only that it COULD reach to 15B$ USD. Nothing in the article itself is stating that the costs are confirmed. Unless I am misreading it, if so please quote directly where it states that the costs are confirmed to exceed over 1B$ USD @
Hurricane Noahzoey (trooncel)22:33, 31 October 2023 (UTC)reply
@
Trooncel:In Acapulco, Otis claimed at least 27 lives according to the local governor's tally issued on Thursday, which has not been updated. It has also caused widespread destruction and billions of dollars in damages. Billions by default means >1 billion. There is no need for something to be "confirmed". That is an over-complication of the matter since costs are never entirely confirmed but are merely estimates.
Noah,
AATalk22:41, 31 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Problem is it just says between 200 thousand to 300 billion pesos will be required to rebuild or up to 300 billion earlier at the start.
Noah,
AATalk01:01, 5 November 2023 (UTC)reply
Where it says entre 200 mil y 300 mil millones? Yeah, you have to parse that as "between (200,000 and 300,000) million", ie 200 bn to 300 bn. 200k pesos isn't enough for a new car.
Moscow Mule (
talk)
01:16, 5 November 2023 (UTC)reply
It’s a weird way of writing it for sure. I’ve similar things expressed in the format of 200 y 300 mil millones. I guess it would be fine if that is correct. I for sure would never write that way in French.
Noah,
AATalk01:51, 5 November 2023 (UTC)reply
I went ahead and added it. I have that other agencies have upped estimates to 14-21 billion USD so this is probably fine for now until we get a better number to use.
Noah,
AATalk12:49, 5 November 2023 (UTC)reply
Semi-protected edit request on 1 November 2023
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This article is within the scope of WikiProject Weather, which collaborates on weather and related subjects on Wikipedia. To participate, help improve this article or visit the
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This article is within the scope of WikiProject Mexico, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
Mexico on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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"The government has so far not estimated the cost of Otis, but Enki Research, which tracks tropical storms and models the cost of their damage, saw it "likely approaching $15 billion.""
I'd wait till the government's estimate comes out or some new source comes out with a preliminary estimate to put a damage cost (
talk)
02:04, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
@
TC Animates: The $15 billion is not a direct damage estimate. The sources I see fall short of claiming explicitly that $15 billion worth of property damage has occurred and therefore it is not possible for us to make bold claims like it being the most expensive Mexico or Pacific hurricane yet (
WP:NOR).--
Jasper Deng(talk)03:47, 29 October 2023 (UTC)reply
@
Jasper Deng: I set the damage as >1 billion per the Reuters source stating Otis caused billions in damage. I feel that would be a good starting point here and can always be changed later as new information comes out.
Noah,
AATalk12:23, 31 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Andrew as see also
@
AveryTheComrade: Andrew is the only other Category 5 hurricane to impact such a large metropolitan area at Category 5 intensity. Both were small but powerful storms of very similar size and both caused similarly devastating impacts. Your "totally irrelevant" does not stand up to scrutiny.
Jasper Deng(talk)05:29, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
If the only things necessary for a storm to be relevant to Otis are "Category 5" and "struck a large metropolitan area as a category 5" then there are at least a dozen more storms that can be added to See Also.
AveryTheComrade (
talk)
06:24, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
No. Give another example where a Cat 5 struck a densely populated area with many high-rise buildings. Andrew also was extremely similar meteorologically, much more so than other Category 5 hurricanes: exact same winds at landfall, pressure only one millibar different, very similar size.--
Jasper Deng(talk)06:27, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
To quote Masters: "This means that the most heavily developed areas of Acapulco (population just over 1 million) received the more powerful right-front winds of Otis, perhaps setting a record for the largest number of people ever to experience the eyewall of a Cat 5 storm. The only comparable case may be Hurricane Andrew of 1992, which hit South Florida as a Cat 5 with 165 mph winds." No other storm meets that criterion.--
Jasper Deng(talk)06:31, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I agree that Andrew should be included in the "See also" section, but how about Hurricane David and Typhoon Angela? Shouldn't they be included as well, given the fact that those two tropical cyclones were both Category 5s when they crossed Santo Domingo and Metro Manila respectively?
Vida0007 (
talk)
08:34, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I looked at the Spanish wikipedia page on Hurricane Otis. It also says there have been 80 deaths but the link to the source is broken.
Tajjc (
talk)
15:37, 28 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Here's the link:
[1]. It states that there's an additional 50 deaths, but that seems unofficial given that when translated to English, it states "casting doubt on the Mexican government's official figure, which reports only 27 people killed by the storm." In my opinion, I would update when the additional deaths are officially confirmed, but it seems like it isn't for now.
TailsWx15:44, 28 October 2023 (UTC)reply
@
Jasper Deng: I didn't change anything listed here other than remove the level 3 header, which I removed because I wanted to combine the paragraph with the deaths with general nationalwide statisics like I usually do when writing articles. I adhered to all your content principles.
YEPacificHurricane01:51, 29 October 2023 (UTC)reply
@
Yellow Evan: But the point of separating the casualties is due to the variation in death tolls and skepticism over the official one, so I don't think the paragraph should be combined. That's what we've agreed upon here.--
Jasper Deng(talk)02:57, 29 October 2023 (UTC)reply
At first the casualties section was appropriately written with sources explicitly saying reported deaths were not included in official tolls. However, since then there have been updates to the official tally and assumptions are being made that the reported deaths are still being excluded from the 48 confirmed deaths. We cannot say the 50 reported bodies recovered from the ocean are not part of the 48 confirmed if we don't have explicit confirmation of this. The passage of time has rendered that assumption invalid. This applies to all reported deaths that were made before updates to certified deaths. The certification process for deaths is known to take time. We can still include mention of reported deaths but they must be given appropriate context of when they were reported in relation to official tolls. We cannot make a statement of total deaths adding up reported deaths on top of the official tally, it's a blatant violation of
WP:OR and
WP:SYNTH. ~
Cyclonebiskit (
chat)
19:20, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
There is no reason bodies would not be reported until they are identified, considering there will be many that won't be, so there is no reason these will be only included in part by the government. Therefore, as 50 > 48, it is mathematically impossible for the rescuers' story to have been included and given that the 16 hospital deaths were of a cause different from water suffocation (drowning; that's what the government has described it as), they can't possibly have been included either.
WP:CALC, adding the numbers without giving a verdict on whether it is likely to be correct, is perfectly reasonable.--
Jasper Deng(talk)19:24, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
You're making an incredible leap to assume not a single person of those 50, reported when the official toll was 27, have not been included in the 48. The numbers are not mutually exclusive and without the source explicitly saying none of the 50 deaths have been confirmed you cannot make a separate "unofficial" tally. The 50 bodies recovered do not have a marked cause of death, they were just found in the water which can happen from various means in a multifaceted natural disaster.
WP:CALC does not apply without ample confirmation that the numbers are mutually exclusive. Just because 50 is greater than 48 it does not mean the 50 is entirely separate from the 48. The hospital deaths are a different situation as those were outright denied by the government. ~
Cyclonebiskit (
chat)
19:30, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
That's not an incredible assumption by any means. In a
plane crash, the death toll is given before anyone is identified (and thus certified) dead. Since @
CarterStormTracking: was originally in favor of this, they should also weigh in, but you're going to need a change of consensus to remove it.--
Jasper Deng(talk)19:34, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
It is without an explicit statement that none of the 50 deaths were officially confirmed in the three days since they were reported. You're inherently assuming that none are included because X is greater than Y. That's not a valid argument when context is of utmost importance here. The reported deaths from a plane crash are an entirely different situation as there is a definitive list of potential victims and simple math can be used. That is not the case here with over 1 million people affected. You cannot compare the two. ~
Cyclonebiskit (
chat)
19:39, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
The NPR article says they're not counted in the official tally. This is definitely comparable as a subincident of the disaster that happened at one place and time. Combined with media-reported skepticism of the official tallies, and your oft-ignored fact that there is quite literally no reason not to count the 50 (actually 70) bodies in whole, your argument does not stand. At this point, unless the others in this thread agree, your only option is a
WP:3O.--
Jasper Deng(talk)19:43, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
The
cited NPR article states the 50 were not included as of October 28 when the Government reported 27 deaths. Since then there have been another 21 certified deaths. The information is outdated, full stop. There has to be evidence that states none of the 50 deaths confirmed at the time of this discussion are included in the 48. You're making a further assumption that none of the 20 deaths seen by the person in the NPR article were included in the 50 reported "across the city". The article does not mention "70" at any point. And even then, the information will once again be outdated once the official toll updates. ~
Cyclonebiskit (
chat)
19:48, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
It is still not mathematically possible for them to have been included because they would've all been included. Once the official death toll reaches something where that is no longer the case (i.e. at least 77), then there's an argument to be made that it's outdated; until then, there is not. It's unlikely we are going to agree; wait until others comment to proceed further.--
Jasper Deng(talk)19:51, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Again, you're assuming mutual exclusivity without clear evidence. You're also making an assumption that the death certification process happens in bulk and all 50 bodies were processed and certified at the same time. Bodies can arrive at the morgue simultaneously and be certified at different times. The report doesn't even say the bodies were sent to a morgue, they just said they were found. There are far too many uncertainties and pieces to make such a claim with such confidence. ~
Cyclonebiskit (
chat)
20:00, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
We could say it was unknown at the time how many (if any) of the 50 deaths may be included in the official government figure.
Tajjc (
talk)
20:30, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I have to side with @
Cyclonebiskit here. It's not right to (A) make the assumption that various unofficial tallies of body recoveries do not overlap or to (B) sum them up and present it as an alternative possible death toll, even outside the lead for the infobox. More clarity regarding casualties will likely come with time. All the arguing and calculation will probably be redundant in a few days.
Penitentes (
talk)
19:54, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
This is a sensible stance, and as always care should be taken to faithfully represent reported information. There is no detailed enumeration of who and where the fatalities were, and cause of death, as
Cyclonebiskit (
talk·contribs) saliently identified. Adding the counts of recovered bodies which may or may not overlap with the official death toll is a simple exercise in
WP:CALC, but its placement here to suggest that they add in a mutually exclusive manner to a death toll of 141 (which is not listed anywhere) violates
WP:SYNTH. As an aside, a quick glance at the source for unofficial report by a Mexican soldier saying his unit had recovered 1 body and that local officials recovered 6 othersdoes not explicitly indicate whether these were part of the "official" death toll. —
TheAustinMan(
Talk ⬩
Edits)20:50, 30 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Suitable high-resolution images of damage
Regarding damage(s): does anyone have a source that could provide suitable images for use on Wikimedia Commons? I would think that a subject of this magnitude would warrant one or two good images of the impact in Acapulco and its environs.
CapeVerdeWave (
talk)
16:24, 28 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Contact the photographers of images you've seen and ask them if they'd be willing to upload the images to Commons. You are almost certainly not going to find public domain or Creative Commons images anywhere.
AveryTheComrade (
talk)
18:32, 28 October 2023 (UTC)reply
would the 1.7 billion spent in relief count towards dmg totals in $?
Phil Klotzbach is a source. Not sure it is notable enough to be mentioned though, and in any case this record will not stand in post-analysis since 12z was revised upwards to 65 knots, cutting the intensification from 70 to 60 knots, and probably less in post-analysis.--
Jasper Deng(talk)08:14, 29 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Unsourced intro
The intro paragraphs are lacking some sources IMO, only having one that I've added at the moment. But I feel like most sources should be able to be found elsewhere in the article? Karagone🗨15:29, 29 October 2023 (UTC)reply
You are correct in that
WP:DATE doesn't require a year in a date. In fact, all of the "WP:" and "MOS:" articles are guidelines, not requirements. However, if someone were to read only a portion of the article that contains dates without the years, or extract it for use somewhere else (in this case, say an article like
Pacific hurricane, the information would be ambiguous and/or misleading if not totally incorrect. There is nothing wrong with using the full date, including the year any place a date is used. Including the year enhances the overall clarity of Wikipedia articles.
Truthanado (
talk)
01:34, 31 October 2023 (UTC)reply
There is something wrong, namely that we should not include redundant years that needlessly take up space. Note that the meteorological history section begins with a full date and does not use the year again, which is amply sufficient to establish 2023 as the year. This content will not be used anywhere else on Wikipedia that will not specify 2023. Convention in WPTC articles has always been to not redundantly add years to dates in storm articles, so you will need to discuss this at
WT:WPTC for consistency. Also, your argument could be used to establish that articles like the
1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo need to have the year in every date as well, which is clearly unwieldy.--
Jasper Deng(talk)04:25, 31 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I don't want to start an edit war but the source that was linked for the damages doesn't look concrete. The source itself does not mention that it is confirmed that the damage totals exceed 1B$ USD, only that it COULD reach to 15B$ USD. Nothing in the article itself is stating that the costs are confirmed. Unless I am misreading it, if so please quote directly where it states that the costs are confirmed to exceed over 1B$ USD @
Hurricane Noahzoey (trooncel)22:33, 31 October 2023 (UTC)reply
@
Trooncel:In Acapulco, Otis claimed at least 27 lives according to the local governor's tally issued on Thursday, which has not been updated. It has also caused widespread destruction and billions of dollars in damages. Billions by default means >1 billion. There is no need for something to be "confirmed". That is an over-complication of the matter since costs are never entirely confirmed but are merely estimates.
Noah,
AATalk22:41, 31 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Problem is it just says between 200 thousand to 300 billion pesos will be required to rebuild or up to 300 billion earlier at the start.
Noah,
AATalk01:01, 5 November 2023 (UTC)reply
Where it says entre 200 mil y 300 mil millones? Yeah, you have to parse that as "between (200,000 and 300,000) million", ie 200 bn to 300 bn. 200k pesos isn't enough for a new car.
Moscow Mule (
talk)
01:16, 5 November 2023 (UTC)reply
It’s a weird way of writing it for sure. I’ve similar things expressed in the format of 200 y 300 mil millones. I guess it would be fine if that is correct. I for sure would never write that way in French.
Noah,
AATalk01:51, 5 November 2023 (UTC)reply
I went ahead and added it. I have that other agencies have upped estimates to 14-21 billion USD so this is probably fine for now until we get a better number to use.
Noah,
AATalk12:49, 5 November 2023 (UTC)reply
Semi-protected edit request on 1 November 2023
This
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