《TAIPEI TIMES》Taiwan shuts down as Krathon nears
A person yesterday walks past a store in Taipei’s Wenshan District with taped-up windows as a precaution for Typhoon Krathon. Photo: CNA
SLOW-MOVING STORM:The typhoon has started moving north, but at a very slow pace, adding uncertainty to the extent of its impact on the nation
By Shelley Shan / Staff reporter
Work and classes have been canceled across the nation today because of Typhoon Krathon, with residents in the south advised to brace for winds that could reach force 17 on the Beaufort scale as the Central Weather Administration (CWA) forecast that the storm would make landfall there.
Force 17 wind with speeds of 56.1 to 61.2 meters per second, the highest number on the Beaufort scale, rarely occur and could cause serious damage.
Krathon could be the second typhoon to land in southwestern Taiwan, following typhoon Elsie in 1996, CWA records showed.
As of 8pm yesterday, the typhoon’s center was 180km southwest of Kaohsiung, the agency said.
It was moving northwest at 6kph, with the maximum wind speed near the center reaching 198kph, it said.
The storm’s radius had expanded to 220km, it added.
Krathon began moving north yesterday afternoon, but very slowly, CWA senior weather forecaster Wu Wan-hua (伍婉華) said, adding that it is forecast to move northeast after the center makes landfall.
As the typhoon would be affected by Taiwan’s topography after making landfall, Wu said the CWA has lowered its aggregate rainfall estimates for northern and northeastern Taiwan.
It is unlikely that the typhoon and northeast monsoon would converge to jointly affect the weather in the northern region, she added.
The projected path of the typhoon showed it approaching the southwest coast this afternoon, CWA forecaster Lin Ping-yu (林秉煜) said, adding that it could be downgraded to a tropical depression by Friday after making landfall on Taiwan proper.
However, the speed at which Krathon would move after landing has added some uncertainty to the agency’s subsequent forecasts for the typhoon, Lin said.
“It is a typhoon that formed in the fall, which means that it is subject to influences from various atmospheric factors, such as the Pacific high-pressure system and other systems from the north. We will have to monitor whether it would slow down after reaching land on the southwestern coast, and whether it would lean north or south after making landfall,” he said.
Today, extremely heavy to torrential rain is forecast in Kaohsiung and Tainan, as well as in Hualien, Taitung and Pingtung counties, during the day, while chances of heavy rain are high in Yilan and Taipei as well, he said.
If the typhoon makes landfall tonight and proceeds to move northeast, rain in the south is expected to continue steadily while rain in the north would increase, he said.
If the typhoon slows after landing, rainfall in the south is expected to increase, while rain in the north could continue to fall steadily until tomorrow.
All domestic flights today have been canceled, as have numerous international flights.
Tigerair Taiwan announced that round-trip flights between Kaohsiung and Macau; Japan’s Nagoya City, Tokyo Narita Airport and Okinawa Naha Airport; Gimpo International Airport in Seoul; and Da Nang City in Vietnam have been canceled.
EVA Airways (長榮航空) flights departing before midday from Kaohsiung for Tokyo Narita Airport, Osaka City and Hong Kong have also been canceled.
Cathay Pacific Airways canceled round-trip flights between Kaohsiung and Hong Kong, and between Taoyuan and Hong Kong today, tomorrow and on Friday.
Starlux Airlines (星宇航空) yesterday announced that round-trip flights between Taichung and Da Nang and Macau tomorrow have been canceled.
Trains operating on the South Link Railway Line have all been canceled, Taiwan Railway Corp said yesterday, adding that it has adjusted some eastbound and southbound train services.
新聞來源:TAIPEI TIMES
Troops load sand bags onto a truck at a city government district office for distribution in anticipation of Super Typhoon Krathon as it approached Kaohsiung yesterday. Photo: Walid Berrazeg, AFP
President William Lai, center, attends a briefing at the Central Emergency Operation Center in New Taipei City yesterday to obtain updates about the progress of Typhoon Krathon. Photo: Liao Chen-huei, Taipei Times