Typhoon Noul is expected to pass east of Taiwan and move toward Okinawa on Monday. At 11:00 p.m. EDT on Sunday the center of Typhoon Noul was located at latitude 21.2°N and longitude 122.4°E which put it about 260 miles south-southeast of Taipei, Taiwan, about 240 miles south-southwest of Ishigaki and about 550 miles southwest of Naha, Okinawa. Noul was moving toward the north at 11 m.p.h. The maximum sustained wind speed was 120 m.p.h. and there were gusts to 150 m.p.h. The minimum surface pressure was 944 mb.
Noul will be moving over increasingly cooler Sea Surface Temperatures (SSTs) as it moves northeastward on Monday. In addition, it will move into an area where stronger westerly winds are blowing in the upper levels of the atmosphere. Cooler SSTs and increasing vertical wind shear will cause Noul to weaken steadily. However, it could still be a typhoon when it passes near Okinawa.
Noul is moving around the western end of the subtropical ridge that has been steering it. As it moves farther to the north, it will be steered by the mid-latitude westerly winds and Noul will accelerate toward the northeast. Noul is like to make a transition to an extratropical cyclone when it passes south of Japan.