Will Fukushima be lucky again this time and avert a direct hit?
Japan
on highest alert for ‘once in decades’ typhoon
- New forecasts show direct hit at Fukushima plant
- Official: “Extraordinary situation… Grave danger approaching”
- Record-level winds to 170mph, waves near 50ft
- Military: “Can’t stress enough how dangerous… not just another typhoon” Astronaut: It “takes up our entire view… Wow”
7
July, 2014
TIME,
July 7, 2014: A “once in decades” storm is approaching Japan’s
southern islands with winds up to 150 mph, the country’s weather
agency said [...] The Japan Meteorological Agency [predicted] the
super typhoon will grow into an “extremely intense” storm by
Tuesday. “In these regions, there is a chance of the kinds of
storms, high seas, storm surges and
heavy rains that you’ve never experienced before,” a JMA official
said [...] “This is an extraordinary situation, where a grave
danger is approaching.”
Weather
Channel,
July 7, 2014 at 10:30p ET (emphasis added): [...] sustained winds of
198 kilometers (123 miles) per hour and gusts
up to 270 kph (168 mph),
the Japan Meteorological Agency said [and] could be one of the
strongest to hit Japan in decades, generating waves up to 14 meters
(46 feet) high. “There is a risk of unprecedentedly strong winds
and torrential rains” [...] Agency official Satoshi Ebihara told
reporters at a news conference. [...] The storm’s
slow movement could add to the potential damage
[...] leaders held an emergency
meeting and
urged local governments and
residents
to take maximum precautions.
Brigadier General James Hecker, July 6, 2014: “I can’t stress enough how dangerous this typhoon may be when it hits Okinawa [...] This is not just another typhoon.”
Brigadier General James Hecker, July 6, 2014: “I can’t stress enough how dangerous this typhoon may be when it hits Okinawa [...] This is not just another typhoon.”
Tweet
from astronaut Reid Wiseman aboard the International Space Station:
Typhoon Neoguri nearing Japan. Takes up our entire view. Wow.
AFP,
July 7, 2014 at 7:00p ET: [Japan's] weather agency issued its highest
alert.
The top-level
warning
means a threat to life, as well as the risk of massive damage [...]
for Okinawa’s main island, home to around 1.2 million [...]
“Record-level violent winds and high waves are posing a serious
danger to the Miyako island region,” Satoshi Ebihara, the Japanese
weather agency’s chief forecaster, told an evening news conference.
[...] massive gusts and torrential rains will possibly reach mainland
Japan by Wednesday [...] The
storm could affect an area with a 500-kilometre radius.
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