Fiji Sun

Japan’s Floods, Heatwave Kill More Than 300 in July

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Tokyo: More than 300 people died in July from weatherrel­ated disasters in one of Japan’s deadliest months in recent years. First came record rainfall.

Disaster authoritie­s say at least 220 people were killed early in the month by severe flooding and landslides in western Japan, with nine more still missing and presumed dead. That was followed by record temperatur­es topping 40°C. The heat has been blamed for 116 deaths.

The toll was high, even for a country prone to earthquake­s, volcanic eruptions and typhoons. One of the wealthiest nations in the world, Japan has used its technologi­cal prowess to build substantia­l defenses against natural disasters. Rivers are lined with tall walls and manmade embankment­s to keep them from overflowin­g.

Skyscraper­s, built on shock-absorbing systems, are designed to sway in an earthquake instead of toppling.

A big-enough disaster, though, overwhelms the defenses.

THE RAIN

Western Japan saw historic rainfall at the end of the first week of

July. Warm and humid air from the Pacific

Ocean intensifie­d a seasonal rain front, triggering torrential downpours, the Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency said.

What was left of a typhoon earlier in the week added to water levels. The death toll was the largest from a major storm since 1982, according to the Nippon.com website. About half the victims were in Hiroshima prefecture, where the more than 100 deaths exceeded the 77 killed by landslides in the same state in 2014.

Also hard-hit was neighborin­g Okayama prefecture, where a river embankment collapsed in Kurashiki city, submerging neighbourh­oods in one-story high floodwater­s. More than 70,000 troops and emergency workers were dispatched to distribute supplies and dig through debris to search for the missing.

THE HEAT

One measure of the heat is the number of people taken to hospitals by ambulance with heatstroke symptoms. That figure more than tripled to nearly 10,000 in the second week of July and topped 22,000 in the third week before falling back to a still high 13,700 last week, the Fire and Disaster Management Agency said on Tuesday.

The mercury hit 41.1°C on July 23 in Kumagaya, a city about 65km northwest of Tokyo, the highest ever recorded in Japan. The temperatur­e reached 39°C the same day in central Tokyo. Two lingering high-pressure systems trapped warm and humid air above the region, bringing record temperatur­es for about two weeks.

The blistering heat wave has also gripped neighborin­g South Korea, where 26 people have died of heat-related causes in July, the Korea Centres for Disease Control and Prevention said on Tuesday.

Many of the victims in Japan were elderly people who were not using air conditioni­ng. Authoritie­s and news media repeatedly urged people to stay inside and turn on the air conditioni­ng. A first-grade student died on a school outing to a park.

The record heat reignited a simmering debate about how athletes and spectators will fare at the Summer Olympics in Tokyo in 2020. Organisers promised a slew of measures to combat the heat, including an early morning start to the marathon. Bloomberg

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