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World4h ago85% confidenceConfidence 85% — the share of independent, credible sources corroborating the core facts.

Japan Faces Potentially Record Typhoon Season With Forecasts of Up to 28 Storms

1 source

A private Japanese meteorological firm has predicted that up to 28 typhoons could affect Japan this year, with 14 potentially making landfall, significantly above historical averages. This forecast comes as Japan typically experiences fewer than three typhoons making landfall annually, with the record being 10 in 2004. The potential surge threatens both Japan's disaster infrastructure and its already-strained summer tourism industry.

Tokyo-based Weathernews has issued a long-range forecast predicting an unusually active typhoon season for Japan, with projections of up to 28 typhoons affecting the country and 14 potentially making landfall. These numbers would approach or exceed historical records—Japan's record of 33 typhoons forming in a single year was set in 1994, while the highest number to make landfall is 10 in 2004. The forecast suggests Japan could face repeated extreme weather events through summer and into early autumn. Recent Typhoon Jangmi in early June demonstrated the rapid disruption such storms cause, resulting in 524 cancelled domestic flights, widespread rail service disruptions, and emergency evacuations across multiple prefectures. The potential for an exceptionally active season raises concerns about whether Japan's disaster defenses and tourism infrastructure can handle sustained impacts.

What's missing

The article does not explain what factors are driving the forecast of an unusually active season (e.g., ocean temperature anomalies, atmospheric conditions) or provide expert analysis on whether climate change is contributing to increased typhoon activity. Additionally, there is no discussion of how Japan's disaster response systems have evolved since previous record seasons.

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