Typhoon Goni moved steadily westward away from the Mariana Islands on Monday. At 11:00 p.m. EDT on Monday the center of Typhoon Goni was located at latitude 18.3°N and longitude 135.3°E which put it about 780 miles (1260 km) southeast of Okinawa. Goni was moving toward the west at 19 m.p.h. (31 km/). The maximum sustained wind speed was 120 m.p.h. (195 km/h) and there were wind gusts to 150 m.p.h. (240 km/h). The minimum surface pressure was 944 mb.
Goni appeared to go through an eyewall replacement cycle on Monday which resulted in a reduction in the maximum wind speed. As the tiny pinhole inner eye weakened, the stronger winds were located in the larger outer eyewall. The reduction in wind speed could be temporary, if the outer eye begins to contract. Goni remains in a favorable environment. It is moving over warm Sea Surface Temperature and the vertical wind shear is very modest. The circulation is producing upper level divergence in all directions. Goni will remain in a favorable environment for another two or three days and it should remain strong during that time period.
A subtropical ridge is steering Goni toward the west-northwest and that steering pattern is expect to continue for another 48 to 72 hours. Later this week an upper level trough could approach the typhoon from the northwest. Southwesterly winds on the eastern side of the trough could turn Goni toward the north later this week. On its anticipated track Goni could be near Taiwan, the northern Philippines or Okinawa when it makes that turn.