Deadly
600 mm (23.6 in) of rain within 11 hours floods Taiwan, shuts down
nuclear plant
2 June, 2017
Brutal amounts of
rainfall hit northern Taiwan today, June 2, 2017, killing at least 1
person, leaving 2 missing and injuring more than 20. Heavy rain
toppled electricity pylon near New Taipei's Jinshan Nuclear Power
Plant, resulting in the automatic shutdown of the plant. The rains
have since moved toward the center and south of the island and are
expected to continue through the weekend.
Some areas of the
affected region saw water surging into cars, homes and businesses
after more than 600 mm (23.6 inches) of rain fell in under 11 hours.
Channel News Asia reported the body of a female motorcyclist was
found after being washed into a ditch in New Taipei City, one of the
worst hit areas.
According to the National
Fire Agency, two people, one from New Taipei City and the other from
the city of Keelung are missing after being swept off, while a road
bridge in the area was smashed in half by a swollen river. At least
20 people were hurt in the deluge, including a driver injured when
his truck overturned and another man hurt after being buried in a
mudslide.
Around 15 hikers were
also stranded on a mountain in central Miaoli because of a surging
river, but were thought to be unharmed and with sufficient supplies.
At a kindergarten in Taipei, 53 children had to be evacuated as
floodwater poured in, local media said. More than 300 flights were
delayed at Taiwan's Taoyuan International Airport.
Taipower said the 345-kV
tower fell at 10:31 local time, resulting in the automatic shutdown
of the New Taipei's Jinshan Nuclear Power Plant reactor No. 2 - a
safety mechanism activated whenever a reactor cannot transmit power,
The China Post reported. Local media sources indicated that neither
the reactor nor the generator was damaged during the incident.
However, for safety reasons, the restarted reactor will remain
running at 75% capacity - the level at which it was running when the
shutdown occurred - until it runs out of fuel, which is estimated to
be June 10 or 11.
The
rain started late Thursday, June 1, and was easing up in Taipei
by Friday afternoon (local time). However, huge amounts of rain that
fell within just 11 hours caused major flooding. Friday's record
holder is Sanzhi District in New Taipei City whose Sanzhi station
registered staggering 645.5 mm (25.4 inches). Nantianchi station in
Taoyuan District of Kaohsiung City received 638 mm (25.1 inches).
72
hours of rainfall accumulation by 12:00 UTC (20:00 local time) on
June 2, 2017.
Rainfall
accumulation by station for June 2, 2017 - Taiwan. Source: Taiwan's
Central Weather Bureau
Total
accumulated precipitation - Taiwan, June 2, 2017. Credit: Central
Weather Bureau
According to
AccuWeather Meteorologist Adam Douty, moisture from what was
once Tropical Cyclone "Mora" moved along the Mei-yu
front across southeastern China and Taiwan, leading to the very heavy
rainfall.
"The
Mei-yu front is a semi-stationary boundary that forms during the late
spring and summer across southeastern Asia," he said.
Douty
added that this front is notorious for triggering torrential rainfall
and that he expects additional rounds of rainfall along the
front to exacerbate the flood risk into this weekend.
The
heaviest downpours are likely to focus on southern Taiwan on Saturday
before spreading back to the north on Sunday.
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