Showing posts with label rains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rains. Show all posts

Monday, January 10, 2011

Central region braces for more floods

Heavy rains have occurred in the central provinces from Quang Ngai to Khanh Hoa as a result of a cold spell that hit the region over the last two days.

In Binh Dinh Province, water levels on local rivers have risen, submerging the districts of Tuy Phuoc, Phu Cat, Phu My and An Nhon. Provincial roads were inundated, causing a traffic gridlock.

Heavy rains and unfinished drainage works submerged residential areas in the capital city, Quy Nhon, by 1-1.5 meters under water.

In Phu Yen Province, rain-triggered floods have killed a 55-year-old man.

According to the Central Hydrometeorology Forecast Center, heavy rains are forecast to last in the next two days. It also warned against flash floods and landslides in mountainous areas and flooding in lowlands.

The National Committee for Flood Prevention and Control on Monday sent a note to the committees in Binh Dinh, Phu Yen, Khanh Hoa, Kon Tum, Gia Lai and Dak Lak, asking them to take measures to fight against floods.

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Central region braces for more floods

Heavy rains have occurred in the central provinces from Quang Ngai to Khanh Hoa as a result of a cold spell that hit the region over the last two days.

In Binh Dinh Province, water levels on local rivers have risen, submerging the districts of Tuy Phuoc, Phu Cat, Phu My and An Nhon. Provincial roads were inundated, causing a traffic gridlock.

Heavy rains and unfinished drainage works submerged residential areas in the capital city, Quy Nhon, by 1-1.5 meters under water.

In Phu Yen Province, rain-triggered floods have killed a 55-year-old man.

According to the Central Hydrometeorology Forecast Center, heavy rains are forecast to last in the next two days. It also warned against flash floods and landslides in mountainous areas and flooding in lowlands.

The National Committee for Flood Prevention and Control on Monday sent a note to the committees in Binh Dinh, Phu Yen, Khanh Hoa, Kon Tum, Gia Lai and Dak Lak, asking them to take measures to fight against floods.

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Saturday, November 20, 2010

Floods threaten central provinces, again

No sooner had they recovered after the floods earlier this month, the central provinces are coping with heavy rains, with floods already slamming into several areas, threatening Ha Tinh, Quang Binh, Quang Tri and Thua Thien - Hue.
In Ha Tinh, flash floods occured in Huong Son district, leaving one dead and more than 1,500 houses flooded. Heavy rains and steep hills have triggered floods, according to Nguyen Duy Trinh, chairman of Huong Son district.
The district currently has more than 410 ha of rice and 1,200 ha of maize, which were left after the recent floods, now submerged in flood waters.
In Quang Binh, heavy rains cause by a cold wave, appeared on Thursday and Friday. In Tan Hoa commune, the area which has experienced the recent history flooding, heavy rains have raised water levels in rivers and streams by 0.5 meters.
Nguyen Ngoc Giai, director of Quang Binh Bureau of Dyke and Flood Prevention, said it is forecast water may rise to alert levels, especially in big river as Kien Giang, Gianh and Nhat Le, from now until next Wednesday.
In Quang Tri, heavy rains accompanied by strong winds on Thursday raised water levels in many rivers in mountainous districts such as Dakrong and Huong Hoa. Heavy downpours also occurred in the lowlands.
Water level on the Ben Hai River in Gia Voong is 42 cm more then the normal level. Heavy rains have been non-stop as of Friday evening.
In Thua Thien - Hue, a tornado left one dead, four students and a teacher seriously injured, and dozens of houses damaged in Ha Long village, Phong My commune.
The village is now being isolated, and only boats can travel there. The village’s population is mainly ethnic minorities, with 83 households of about 300 people.
"The roof of my house was blown up, and dozens of kilograms of stored rice are now totally wet," Ho Thi Dao, a Pa Hy ethnic woman, said in tears.
The tornado killed Tran Ngoc Me, an 80-year-old resident whose house was completely collapsed.
In Quang Binh, the Ho Chi Minh City Road section that goes through the districts of Tuyen Hoa, Quang Ninh and Le Thuy was severely eroded.
The road that goes through Truong Son commune was half eroded, causing traffic jams. According to the 483 Limited Company, which is repairing damaged roads, there are more than 98 landslide-affected spots in the 45-km road section that goes through the two districts of Quang Ninh and Le Thuy.
Another section of the Ho Chi Minh Road is badly eroded in A Dot - A Tep, the area from A Luoi district of Thua Thien - Hue province to Tay Giang district of Quang Nam province.
A storm is approaching the East Sea
On Friday, international meteorological forecast centers warned that a powerful storm called Megi which formed on the northwestern part of the Pacific Ocean is approaching the East Sea.
Typhoon Megi was moving west-northwest at 17 kilometers per hour and is forecast to reach Luzon, the Philippines’ most populous island, within four days.
The storm’s maximum sustained winds were blowing at 167 kph and may strengthen to 250 kph as it approaches the northern part of Luzon, the centers said.
That would make it a Category 5 storm, the strongest, on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind scale and capable of “catastrophic damage,” according to the US National Hurricane Center.
Waves in the vicinity of the storm’s eye were 6.7 meters (22 feet) high.
Megi is the name of a catfish in South Korea and is related to the feeling of getting wet, according to the Hong Kong Observatory, which lists names assigned to storms in the northwest Pacific.
According to the Central Hydrometeorology Forecast Center, heavy rains occurred over the last two days in the central provinces from Nghe An to Quang Nam, with the average rainfall of 100-150mm, and 150-200mm in the provinces from Ha Tinh to Quang Nam.
Currently the waters in Kien Giang, Vu Gia, and Gianh rivers are on alarming levels.
It is forecast flood waters in Quang Binh and Thua Thien - Hue rivers may rise to alert level 3; in Ha Tinh, Quang Tri and Quang Nam alert level 2; and in Ca River in Nghe An alert level 1.

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Sunday, November 14, 2010

Downpours kill one in Ho Chi Minh City

Downpours kill one in Ho Chi Minh CityOne person was killed during the torrential rains that hit Ho Chi Minh City on Sunday.

The man in his thirties fell into a drain and drowned while riding his bike in Thu Duc District.

Witnesses said the water flow was so strong that another two men almost fell into the drain when trying to rescue the victim.

The man, who is yet to be identified, was found dead 30 minutes later. Police said he drowned.

The evening the rain went on for hours and brought 124mm of rainfall, the heaviest this year, according to the HCMC Center for Executing Flood Prevention Programs.

Flood tides also rose, reaching 1.48 meters in some areas, it reported.

The heavy rains together with high flood tides flooded more than 40 locations across the city, mainly in Binh Thanh District, Do Tan Long, chief of the center’s Drainage System Management Department, said.

In other news, at least 66 were killed, 17 went missing and 75 were injured in floods caused by torrential rains that hit the central region last month, the Central Committee for Storms and Floods Control reported Monday.

Property losses, meanwhile, have reached VND2.562 trillion (US$131.4 million) in total, it said.

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Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Floods kill 48 in central Vietnam

Floods kill 48 in central VietnamAt least 48 people have died, 1 8 are missing and 19 have been injured in floods brought by torrential rains starting last week in the central provinces, the Central Flood Control Committee reported Thursday.

Quang Binh Province was hardest hit with 33 people dying and 14 missing. Ha Tinh Province ranked second with seven deaths, while Quang Tri and Nghe An posted three and five respectively, it said.

“The rains have stopped falling and the water level has visibly lowered. But the possibility of finding the missing is reduced after several days of searching,” AFP quoted Hoang Van Quyet, an official with Quang Binh Province’s natural disaster committee, as saying.

Many houses, schools, bridges and other constructions were either submerged or damaged by floods across the north of the central coast, the committee said.

More than 17,500 houses were submerged and 638 bridges and drainage systems were swept away or destroyed in Ha Tinh Province.

Tran Minh Ky, vice chairman of Ha Tinh’s People’s Committee, told the Tuoi Tre newspaper that Huong Khe District had been hit hard by flooding partly because the Ho Ho Hydropower Dam had failed to release water when heavy rains came.

In fact, as the sluice gates could be operated because of a power cut, water had overflown the dam and put it at risk of being breached, Ky said.

Water levels in rivers from Ha Tinh to Quang Binh provinces, meanwhile, have gone down after reaching the highest danger levels over the past few days, as rains have stopped or decreased.

Food and emergency medical supplies are being sent to affected communities, state media reported.

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung on Wednesday ordered authorities in affected areas to spend budget funds to buy instant noodles and bottled water for local people in flooded area.

Tropical storms and flooding regularly hit Vietnam at this time of year.

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