Subscribe to daily environment news





 

Click for news Click for pictures
National Tree Day

Planet Ark Home


Typhoon Fades but Leaves at Least 17 Dead in Japan
Mail this story to a friend | Printer friendly version

JAPAN: September 8, 2005


TOKYO - Typhoon Nabi faded into a tropical storm and headed out to sea on Wednesday after killing at least 17 people in southwestern Japan.


Nine people were missing and 126 were injured after Nabi drenched parts of Japan's third-biggest island with more than 1,000 mm (40 inches) of rain, triggering floods and landslides, NHK television said.

Four people were also missing in South Korea.

Television pictures showed rescue workers and military personnel hunting for survivors in wrecked houses in southwestern Japan and people clearing mud out of houses, schools and other buildings.

Police said at least 52 houses were destroyed or badly damaged and about 6,000 houses were flooded. Tens of thousands of people remained in evacuation centres, NHK said.

At the height of the storm, more than 250,000 people fled their homes in southwestern Japan, the Yomiuri newspaper said.

About 100,000 households in the region were without electricity on Wednesday, NHK said.

"Although there are some low-lying areas that are still flooded, a lot of the water has gone down already," said an official in Kyushu's Miyazaki prefecture, where several towns were particularly hard hit.

Nearly 300 people spent the night on a train in Osaka, Japan's second-largest city, after being stranded when the storm halted rail services, Kyodo news agency said. Flights were disrupted on Wednesday, with more than 100 cancelled, NHK said, but train services had resumed after being halted on Tuesday.

Japan's Meteorological Agency said Nabi, whose name means "butterfly" in Korean, was moving northeast over the Sea of Japan and would skim Japan's west coast before hitting the northernmost main island of Hokkaido on Thursday.

The agency warned of heavy rains, high winds and possible flooding and landslides across northern Japan.

Oil refiners, meanwhile, were restoring operations after disruption from the storm.

Top refiner Nippon Oil Corp said it had resumed oil shipments by road and sea to its Marifu refinery on the southern tip of the main island of Honshu, and Kyushu Oil Co. said it had restarted shipments and its refinery in Oita, Kyushu, would return to normal operations later on Wednesday.

In South Korea, which escaped the brunt of the typhoon, several hundred were evacuated after heavy rains and winds battered southern and eastern parts of the country.

The storm dumped about 620 mm (24 inches) of rain in the southeastern industrial city of Ulsan, causing landslides across roads and railway tracks and snarling transport.

Four thousand households were without electricity.

The country's two main airlines -- Korean Air and Asiana -- cancelled over 100 flights.

(Additional reporting by Teruaki Ueno and Jiwon Chung in Tokyo, and Kim Yoo-chul in Seoul)


Story by Isabel Reynolds


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

Reuters



© 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
top

 
TODAY'S
ENVIRONMENT
NEWS

AUSTRALIA:
Australia Fights Climate Change Threat to Rivers

FRANCE:
Carmakers Say Crisis Complicates EU CO2 Compliance

GERMANY:
Berlin Aims to Become Solar Powerhouse

KYRGYZSTAN:
Strong Earthquake Jolts Central Asia

MEXICO:
Tropical Storm Forms Off Mexico's Pacific Coast

NICARAGUA:
Heavy Rains Kill at Least 7 in Nicaragua

PERU:
Peru Studies Climate Riddle as the World Heats Up

PHILIPPINES:
Divers Remove Toxic Fertiliser from Philippine Ferry

POLAND:
Six EU States Ready to Block Climate Plan - Poland

SOUTH KOREA:
With New Tech, POSCO Braces for Stricter Carbon Rules

UK:
UK Pressure Groups Laud New Climate Change Ministry

UK:
Carbon Offset Market Grows Up, Problems Remain

US:
World Bank's "Green" Energy Funding Up 87 Percent

US:
Scientists Develop Solar Cells With a Twist

US:
Does Climate Change's Cause Matter? Not to Palin

US:
Flushing Ballast Tanks Should Protect Great Lakes



previous day


This site developed by Frontline, and managed by Planet Ark using RPM-NT.

Site designed by Jon Dee @ Planet Ark.

Radiant