Typhoon Talim

LadyJeanne

deluded
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Jun 25, 2004
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Fifty5 is right...I hadn't heard anything about this:

fifty5 said:
Not in any way to diminish the tragedy in New Orleans, but the Typhoon that hit China the week before (I happened to be there at the time) hasn't, to the best of my knowledge, even been reported in "the west"...


September 1, 2005 11:35 AM

Typhoon hits China after killing two in Taiwan

BEIJING (Reuters) - Typhoon Talim swept into southern China on Thursday after killing two people in Taiwan and injuring 39 as the island shut businesses, schools and financial markets to ride out the storm.

Talim cut power lines, toppled billboards and tore up trees, while heavy rain led to flooding in some towns in central Taiwan.

The number of households in Taiwan without power was as high as 1.48 million at one point, but electricity had since been restored to about half, officials said. Some 48,500 households were without running water.

The average windspeed had died down to about 126 kmh (78 mph) with gusts at 162 kmh.

The centre of the storm crossed into China's Fujian province around 0630 GMT (7:30 a.m. British time), bringing heavy winds and strong rain that knocked out power to large parts of the provincial capital, Fuzhou, the news Web site www.sina.com.cn reported.

Eastern Zhejiang province had evacuated more than 290,000 people and called nearly 30,000 boats back to port, the Web site said.

Taiwan's National Fire Administration's disaster response centre said one man in south Taiwan drowned in a fish pond on Wednesday after losing his footing.

A car-rental firm employee was blown off the seventh storey of a multilevel car park late on Wednesday in Miaoli city in north Taiwan while checking on the company's fleet, the administration said.

The winds that had ripped through Taipei in the early hours had weakened by the time the capital awoke, leaving a trail of uprooted trees and collapsed street signs.

"The winds were really fierce and it was very dangerous driving through the torrential rain last night," said taxi driver Tsai Ming-wang, who had just finished an overnight shift.

"I heard a loud bang and saw scaffolding had crashed into the street right next to my car. It was a close shave."

Typhoons frequently menace Taiwan, Japan, the Philippines, Hong Kong and southern China during the storm season that lasts from early summer to late autumn. Typhoon Haitang killed 12 people in July, with three still listed as missing.

In 2001, one of Taiwan's deadliest years for storms, Typhoon Toraji, killed 200 people. A few months later, Typhoon Nari caused Taipei's worst flooding on record and killed 100.

(Additional reporting by Tiffany Wu and Michael Kramer in Taipei)

Reuters

http://www.swissinfo.org/sen/swissinfo.html?siteSect=143&sid=6053494&cKey=1125555613000
 
Nearly 600,000 evacuated in China as Typhoon Talim approaches
09.01.2005, 05:43 AM

BEIJING (AFX) - Nearly 600,000 people have been evacuated from China's eastern coastal regions as they brace for Typhoon Talim which is expected to slam into the area later today, officials and state media said.

Talim is 'probably the strongest typhoon China will experience in terms of wind this summer,' said National Meteorological Centre expert Zhang Ling, according to Agence France-Presse.

The storm churned through Taiwan on yesterday, killing two people and injuring 39, as strong winds and heavy rains forced offices, schools and financial markets to close.

The Taiwan Central Weather Bureau said it was 120 kilometers south of Matsu, an island group off China's Fujian province, at 1:15 pm.

With a radius of 250 kilometers, Talim was swirling northwest at a speed of 16 kilometers an hour and packing winds at its center of up to 144 kilometers per hour, it said.

The Fujian provincial observatory issued the highest level 'black alarm' signal and warned of potential landslides, flooding and severe damage to property, Xinhua news agency reported.

http://www.forbes.com/home/feeds/afx/2005/09/01/afx2200694.html
 
OK, it sounds minor compared to NO, but still...

Read the numbers that were evacuated over there!
 
fifty5 said:
OK, it sounds minor compared to NO, but still...

Read the numbers that were evacuated over there!

What are the number evacuated from Katrina? I haven't seen a total for all 3 states. And yes this did make the coverage, granted the 3 tragic deaths did not get as much coverage as the possible 10,000.


The last census I can find for new orleans proper is 484,000. That doesn't include the other parishes that were ordered evacuated. That doens't include the evacuations of Alabama and Mississippi either.


-Alex
 
Alex756 said:
What are the number evacuated from Katrina? I haven't seen a total for all 3 states. And yes this did make the coverage, granted the 3 tragic deaths did not get as much coverage as the possible 10,000.

The last census I can find for new orleans proper is 484,000. That doesn't include the other parishes that were ordered evacuated. That doens't include the evacuations of Alabama and Mississippi either.
Sorry if I gave the wrong impression, Alex. I wasn't trying to say that the typhoon was more important. Just that the scale of evacuations in China was comparable.

One natural disaster can't be compared with another - and I really don't want to even appear to be comparing a communist state favourably against a democratic one, let alone comparing one storm with another: I simply don't have the information to do that, even if I wanted to do so (I don't).

I'm still horrified, from outside, about what seems the inadequacy of the national US response to a tragic happening to their own people - and about Bush's lies (this catastrophe had been forecast; it wasn't unforeseen).
 
fifty5 said:
I'm still horrified, from outside, about what seems the inadequacy of the national US response to a tragic happening to their own people - and about Bush's lies (this catastrophe had been forecast; it wasn't unforeseen).

Would you say the same thing if California had the big one?

What about when the Earth is hit by a large asteroid again?

we now these things -will- happen, but that doesn't make them exactly forseen. I don't think the scale of this tradgedy is understood yet, I saw a satelite image on the news list night. An area the size of conneticut is underwater, an area the size of the UK was devestated.

If Japan gets hit by a large earthquake, damn as much as I hate to say it, when, the loss of life will be horrific depending on where it hits. And Japan has done everything and more humanly possible to prepare, but .... mother nature is a bitch.

-Alex
 
fifty5 said:
Sorry if I gave the wrong impression, Alex. I wasn't trying to say that the typhoon was more important. Just that the scale of evacuations in China was comparable.

One natural disaster can't be compared with another - and I really don't want to even appear to be comparing a communist state favourably against a democratic one, let alone comparing one storm with another: I simply don't have the information to do that, even if I wanted to do so (I don't).

I'm still horrified, from outside, about what seems the inadequacy of the national US response to a tragic happening to their own people - and about Bush's lies (this catastrophe had been forecast; it wasn't unforeseen).

I must confess I was offended by your comments. I am certain you didn't intend to add to the pain of those who are dealing with the tragedy, but your criticism seemed to be directed more towards the victims.

America bashing is very popular right now, and I am so weary of the U.S. being blamed or ridiculed for everything bad that happens on this planet.
 
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