Status: Closed
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Landfall |
9/7/2011 11:45:00 AM |
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Pre-Landfall 2 |
9/2/2011 1:45:00 PM |
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Pre-Landfall 1 |
9/1/2011 11:30:00 AM |
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Landfall | Summary
Posting Date: September 7, 2011, 11:45:00 AM
Current Situation
Tropical Storm Talas came ashore at Kochi Prefecture on Japan’s Shikoku island—the smallest and least populated of the country’s four main islands—at roughly 21:00 UTC Friday, September 2 (6am local time Saturday, September 3). Overnight on Saturday, the slow-moving storm crossed the southern island of Shikoku and the central part of the main island of Honshu, passing near the cities of Kobe, Osaka, and Kyoto, all the while delivering heavy rain. Record rainfall fell on central and western Japan and wide sections of the country experienced damaging winds. On Monday, September 5, Talas finally moved offshore into the Sea of Japan.
Though a weak storm at landfall, Talas was unusually large, with tropical storm force winds extending outwards up to 600 kilometers. According to current measurements from Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission satellites, total accumulated precipitation of 100-200 mm impacted much of Japan, while higher amounts of 1,600 mm impacted a mountainous area in the prefecture of Nara. The storm was record-setting: it broke Japan's previous rainfall record (1,322 millimeters, set in September of 2005 in a town in Miyazaki Prefecture) and exceeded the yearly average of precipitation that falls over the city of Tokyo.
After making landfall, Talas moved into an area of moderate wind shear (15-20 knots); this shear—located along the western edge of a deep-layered subtropical ridge—slowed the storm considerably.Since Talas was slow-moving, taking a full day to track across Japan, which is almost twice as long as had been forecast, its heavy precipitation was particularly damaging. Indeed, the decreased forward speed alone can account for an increase in precipitation totals by a factor of two, in certain locations. Further exacerbating the precipitation damage from this storm was an elongation of its cloud mass to the northeast, as well as its interaction with an approaching mid-latitude front.
Reported Impacts
The damage picture from Talas continues to emerge. Japan’s Fire and Disaster Management Agency (FDMA) reports that roughly 3,000 homes have experienced inundation above the first floor level and more than 13,000 homes have experienced inundation below the first-floor level.
Numerous roads have been washed out. Swollen rivers have flooded whole neighborhoods, where rescue helicopters are delivering food, and power remains cut to nearly 9,500 households across nine prefectures because of flooding, landslides or other damage to access roads.
At least 49 people are dead, and more than 50 people have been reported missing; the nation’s newly appointed Prime Minister, Yoshihiko Noda, has made it clear that he will do everything possible to locate missing persons, though in Nara prefecture, on Honshu Island, fears of landslides delayed rescue efforts earlier this week. Elsewhere, rescuers and reconnaissance teams are spread out in the worst-hit locations (including Wakayama Prefecture) looking for survivors, or any of the thousands of people stranded due to washed out bridges, railways and roads. Although the storm was no longer over land earlier this week, evacuation advisories remained in place for about 100,000 people as the threat of landslides and flooding persisted.
The majority of damage from Talas has been on the Kii Peninsula, in central Japan. The peninsula includes Wakayama Prefecture, the location of most of Talas’s fatalities so far, and Okayama Prefecture, located just west of the cities of Kobe, Osaka, and Kyoto. Okayama Prefecture, which was in the direct path of Talas, has sustained the heaviest property damage. In Tokyo, to the northeast of Kii Peninsula, roads have been flooded.
Though certainly damaging, Talas is not as destructive (nor as deadly) as another “wet” typhoon to come ashore on Shikoku Island in recent history; in 2004, Typhoon Tokage, which tracked east of where Talas tracked this weekend, caused 95 deaths from high winds, flooding and mudslides. The storm also flooded more than 14,000 homes above first floor level, according to the FDMA. Losses from Talas are not expected to be as high as those from Tokage, which AIR estimates would cause insured losses exceeding JPY 186.9 billion if it were to occur today.
As Talas approached Japan late Friday night (local time), the country’s mountainous coast enhanced precipitation on the north and east sides of the storm. In advance of the storm’s arrival, evacuation orders or advisories were issued to roughly 460,000 citizens of Japan, airlines cancelled flights, Japan Railways stopped some of its train service, and numerous expressways were closed.
Since Talas came ashore, roughly 400 flights have been canceled altogether, leaving more than 30,000 people stranded from flight disruptions alone. Presently, nearly 3,000 people are staying in evacuation centers as they wait out the effects of the storm.
Exposure at Risk
Japan has strict and well-enforced construction codes; modern structures withstood Talas' forecast wind speeds with minimal damage, again, making the primary concern from Tropical Storm Talas flood damage. Flood damage in Japan is not automatically included in wind policies. In typical flood policies here, a specified payout is made only when the actual damage falls within a specified range.
The vulnerability of buildings to flood damage varies by construction type. For a given flood depth, a residential wood-frame building is expected to sustain more damage than a residential masonry building. Concrete construction is less vulnerable to flood than steel or masonry. Commercial and apartment buildings usually have stronger foundations than residential buildings, and are thus better able to resist flood loads.
Flood vulnerability also varies by building height. Because damage is usually limited to the lower stories of a building, high-rise buildings will experience a lower damage ratio—the ratio of the repair cost and the total replacement value of the building—than low-rise buildings because a smaller proportion of the building is affected.
Talas is the season’s 12th named storm, the 7th severe tropical storm and the 5th typhoon of the 2011 Pacific typhoon season. Due to Talas’s unexpected slow forward motion across Japan, precipitation and the resultant flooding were more significant than had been forecast last week. Using the latest available meteorological and track information for this event, the AIR Tropical Cyclone team has run the AIR Northwest Pacific Basinwide Typhoon Model. AIR estimates that insured losses from this event will be between JPY 12 billion (USD 150 million) and JPY 46 billion (USD 600 million). This will be AIR’s final email communication regarding this event.
Landfall | Downloads
Posting Date: September 7, 2011, 11:45:00 AM