Draft:List of storms named Debby
Appearance
The name Debbie, Debby, or Debi has been used for 14 tropical cyclones worldwide: 12 in the Atlantic, 2 in the Australian region, and 1 windstorm in the European region.
Atlantic
[edit]- Tropical Storm Debbie (1957), struck the Florida panhandle
- Hurricane Debbie (1961), Category 1 hurricane that hit Ireland as an extratropical storm
- Tropical Storm Debbie (1965), crossed the northeastern Yucatán Peninsula as a depression and dissipated offshore from Mississippi
- Hurricane Debbie (1969), Category 3 major hurricane that brushed Newfoundland
- Hurricane Debby (1982) – reached Category 4 strength, grazed Bermuda, and caused high winds at Cape Race, but no significant damage
- Hurricane Debby (1988) – made landfall at Tuxpan, Veracruz, killing ten; later became Tropical Depression 17-E in the eastern Pacific
- Tropical Storm Debby (1994) – formed near and passed over Saint Lucia, causing severe flooding and mudslides, and later dissipated over Hispanola; nine deaths reported
- Hurricane Debby (2000) – was a disorganized storm that caused minor damage to the Leeward Islands and the Greater Antilles
- Tropical Storm Debby (2006) – formed south of Cape Verde and dissipated in the Central Atlantic
- Tropical Storm Debby (2012) – formed near the Yucatán peninsula and made landfall in Florida
- Tropical Storm Debby (2018) – did not affect land
- Hurricane Debby (2024) – destructive Category 1 hurricane that caused severe flooding in the Gulf Coast of Florida, the East Coast of the United States, and Canada
Australian region
[edit]- Cyclone Debbie (2003), Category 3 severe tropical cyclone that made landfall in the Northern Territory
- Cyclone Debbie (2017), Category 4 severe tropical cyclone that made landfall in Queensland
The name Debbie was retired after mid-2018 and was replaced by Dara.[1]
European windstorm
[edit]- Storm Debi (2023)
- ^ "REVIEW OF THE 2016/2017 AND 2017/2018 CYCLONE SEASONS" (PDF). World Meteorological Organization. 26 July 2018. Retrieved 16 September 2018.