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  1. Early on September 27, Typhoon Nesat struck the Philippines with a maximum 1-min sustained wind speed of 105 kn (194 km/h; 121 mph) and killed four people after pinning them under a collapsed wall in Valenzuela.

  2. August 26–27, 2011: Typhoon Nanmadol (Mina) neared Northern Luzon with its peak intensity as a Category 5 super typhoon. The typhoon brought damaging winds which killed 35 people and infrastructural losses of Php 40.9 billion (US$907.9 million), making it one of the costliest typhoons in the Philippines.

  3. THE 2011 PHILIPPINE TROPICAL CYCLONES SUMMARY. :: Here is the complete summary of Philippine Tropical Cyclones for 2011, occuring within the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) and making landfall & crossing the Philippines.

  4. Jan 6, 2012 · From January to December, nineteen (19) TCs entered the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR), ten (10) of them were destructive namely Tropical Storm (TS) Bebeng (May 8-11); Typhoon Chedeng...

  5. Typhoon Songda, known in the Philippines as Super Typhoon Chedeng, was the strongest tropical cyclone worldwide in 2011. It caused moderate damage in the Philippines when it paralleled the country to the east as a Category 5–equivalent super typhoon; it later affected Taiwan and Japan as a weakening system.

  6. Sep 28, 2011 · Typhoon Nesat demolished seawalls, flooded rivers, and left at least 21 people dead and over two dozen missing. The storm brought some of the worst flooding in decades to Manila, the Philippine...

  7. Typhoon Nesat (local name: Pedring) pounded the Philippines early this morning, 27 September 2011. The powerful storm made landfall over the mountainous region of Isabela and Aurora provinces in northern Luzon, packing winds of up to 140 kilometres per hour (kph) and gusts of 170 kph.