The latest storm Hone has the strongest sustained wind of 65 km/h and is centered about 1,760km east-southeast of Honolulu, Hawaii (USA).
The storm's center is about 1,430km east-southeast of Hilo, Hawaii, according to the latest storm information from the Central Pacific Regional Hurricane Center.
People in Hawaii should monitor the progress of the latest storm in the Pacific, storm forecasters said .
The center of Hurricane Hone is forecast to approach or pass south of the Big Island in Hawaii this weekend. The latest storm system is moving west-northwest at 22 km/h.
AP's latest storm report said that typhoon Gilma is maintaining its strength, with the strongest sustained wind of 205 km/h. Strong winds caused Gilma to become a category 3 hurricane in the Pacific Ocean.
Hurricane Gilma is moving behind Hurricane Hone and is about 3,185km east of Hilo and moving west-northwest at a speed of 11 km/h.
Storm forecasters said Gilma is expected to remain a strong hurricane in the next few days.
Pacific typhoon Gilma strengthened into a tropical storm on August 18 and has continuously strengthened since that time.
The latest storm news from the US National Hurricane Center in Miami said that Gilma's hurricane-force winds have expanded to 56km from the center of the storm while tropical storm-level winds have expanded to 185km.
Gilma is the No. 7 storm in the northeast Pacific. Previously, the storms that formed in this area during this year's storm season were Aletta, Bud, Carlotta, Daniel, Emilia, Fabio.
Meanwhile, according to USA Today, Hone is the first named storm of the 2024 central Pacific storm season.
According to the latest storm news from the National Hurricane Center (NHC), in addition to two active storms in the eastern and central Pacific, a new low pressure is forming in this area.
Depression Invest 92E has a 70% chance of strengthening into a tropical depression or tropical storm in the next 2 days.
Currently, environmental conditions are favorable for this depression to strengthen further. It is forecasted that a tropical depression is likely to form this weekend and move west to west-northwest at a speed of about 16 km/h.