I have been meaning to add a link to the Hot Whopper blog, where Sou puts in what is now almost certainly the most detailed and comprehensive critiques of Anthony Watts and his increasingly desperate Watts Up With That blog.
As the story linked above explains, Watts unwisely chose to publish a way-too-early post along the lines of "you see, this typhoon wasn't as bad as the media made out" post.
I'm not sure if they are still updating the number of dead, but the post is one of the most embarrassing things Watts has ever published.
As David Appell and Andrew Friedman note, actual climate scientists are cautious in their comments about climate change and typhoons. But even Lomborg says it would seem the research is pointing towards possibly fewer, but stronger, typhoons in the future. Then he goes on to complain that it is immoral (!) to use this typhoon to argue for CO2 cuts, because adaptation is better! He's become a one track idiot - adaptation to 6 m storm surges in seaside towns and villages in poor countries like the Philippines or Bangladesh? Yeah, sure.
UPDATE: someone in comments wanted me to update this. You can see my response, but I will add an update after all, from a blog post that has a good discussion of why typhoons are particularly destructive and deadly in that part of the world. I thought this part was especially interesting:
There are hints that global warming may be playing a role here: One 2008 study (pdf) in Nature found that the very strongest typhoons in the northwest Pacific seem to have become somewhat more intense since 1981 — by about 20 mph, on average — as the oceans have warmed. Yet making out a clear trend in tropical cyclones over the past few decades is notoriously difficult, and attributing the strength of a single storm like Haiyan to man-made climate change is even harder.Interesting. You have to wonder whether those scientists in the "attribution wars" who always urge caution (to the point of being dismissive) on AGW contribution to an extreme weather event are actually the ones being somewhat prematurely misleading.