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2017 Tropical Cyclones, 2018 Tropical Cyclones, 2019 Tropical Cyclones

= 2017 Tropical Cyclones=

2018 page: For the 2017 Cyclone season, only northern pacific and Atlantic oceans were covered. Beginning January 1, 2018, this will be expanded to cover the entire northern hemisphere. Areas of interest are only counted for the Atlantic, East Pacific, and Central Pacific Oceans. Storms are put into here in accordance with version 3.2 of the Tropical Cyclone Naming Code.

^* designates 003E and 003L ^^ designates 005E ^^^ designates 006E ^ designates 006L ^^* designates 014W ^** designates 010E and 002C ^*^ designates 020W Where:
 * SD-Subtropical Depression
 * TD-Tropical Depression
 * SS-Subtropical Storm
 * TS-Tropical Storm
 * Subtropical systems will be listed in charts under their counterparts according to wind speed.
 * Potential Tropical Cyclones will be listed in charts under invests.

Wikitable
Where cross-basin AIs only count as one in totals.

January (Tropical Depression 01W)
There was only one tropical cyclone studied in January. This storm was Tropical Depression 01W (003W 2017). This storm was hardly a depression and sure was depressing. On January 6 it was initially called Invest 96W (the 3rd invest of the season) and given a low chance of formation. By the 7th, it became a Tropical Depression, receiving the name Auring from PAGASA. Later, it made landfall in the Philippines as a very weak Tropical Depression/Remnant Low. The peak winds were 25kt and the lowest pressure was 1002mb during the first seven advisories. The JMA continued to classify and reclassify it as a depression for a number of days. By the 14th, JTWC put the risk at High, and the next day, the storm was upgraded to a Tropical Depression. 01W then interacted with Vietnam which caused the storm to fall apart on January 16, getting to 25kt and 1008mb. The total number of advisories was twelve.

February (Tropical Depression 98W/99W)
In February, the JTWC issued no tropical depressions. Despite this, the JMA upgraded Invest 98W to a tropical depression. After this, the invest was renamed Invest 99W.

March (Invest 90L)
In March, the Atlantic basin had a rare tropical disturbance. The disturbance was given a moderate chance of development but then they backed off. As soon as the models started to decrease the chances of development, the NHC upgraded the area to Invest 90L. No Special Outlooks were issued and the system didn't last long. Subtropical development did not occur and the system remained a normal low pressure system.

Western Pacific
In January, there were a total of four invests. One of which became a tropical depression. Tropical Depression One was the only storm to affect land; the Philippines and Vietnam. This storm killed 1 person. In February, there was only one invests. This became a tropical depression. In March, there were two invests. One of which became a tropical depression. In April, there were two invests. One became tropical depression and killed 10 people and cost $1.7 million. The other became a tropical storm. In May, there was one invest. In June, so far, there has been one invest which is currently a tropical depression.

Atlantic
There were no systems in January, February, or May. In March, there was one area of interest which became an invest with the possibility to become a subtropical storm. Nothing occurred from this. In April, there was one invest which became a subtropical depression, a tropical depression, and then a tropical storm. In June, so far, a tropical storm crossed into the basin as an area of interest (see Eastern Pacific).

Eastern Pacific
There were no systems in January, February, March, or April. In May, there were three areas of interest, one became a tropical storm, and another became a tropical depression. In June, so far, the tropical depression from the previous month became a tropical storm (see Atlantic). Another area of interest became an invest.

Central Pacific
There were no systems in January, February, March, April, May, or June, so far.