One dead, another missing as Tropical Cyclone "Kajiki" strikes Vietnam
Credit: NASA/NOAA Suomi NPP/VIIRS
Tropical Cyclone "Kajiki" made landfall in Vietnam on September 3, 2019, triggering floods and landslides. At least one people has been killed and one remains missing.
A tropical depression, soon to be named Kajiki, formed to the east of Luzon, Philippines on August 30. On the same day, it briefly weakened into a low pressure area and regenerated 6 hours later into a tropical depression at midnight on August 31.
The storm passed through the Batanes Islands, and PAGASA upgraded the system to a tropical depression, naming it Kabayan.
Kabayan made landfall in Hainan, China on September 1, and re-emerged over the South China Sea later, and was upgraded by the JTWC to a monsoon depression. By late September 2, the JTWC began issuing advisories on the system, giving the identifier 16W, while the JMA upgraded the system to a tropical storm, naming it Kajiki.
Shortly thereafter, Kajiki made landfall over Vietnam and then re-emerged on the South China Sea, interacting with a weak tropical depression in Hainan, and then exhibiting to re-intensify once more, as it was absorbing the tropical depression to its northeast.
Media reported that the harsh weather resulted in one casualty, one person missing, and another hurt in Quang Bihn Province, central Vietnam.
The GPM core satellite passed over Kajiki in the South China Sea at 08:51 UTC on September 4. GPM found the heaviest rainfall (yellow) in areas over central Vietnam and Laos, where it was falling at a rate of 20 mm (about 0.8 inches) per hour. Lighter rainfall rates (blue) around those areas was between 5 and 10 mm (0.2 and 0.4 inches) per hour. Light rain was also falling over Hainan Island, China (blue). The GPM rain data was overlaid on Japan’s Himawari-8 satellite visible imagery of clouds. Credit: NASA/JAXA/NRL
More residents have started evacuating as Huong Hoa and Dakrong Districts were consumed by floods. The conditions were worsened by the opening of dam in Huong Son, Ha Tinh Province, one of the worst-hit areas.
Vinh was also pounded by the storm, taking rains of 150 to 300 mm (5 to 12 inches). Reports stated that there will be further downpours in Vinh to Danang through September 5, increasing dangers of mudslides and floods.
Harsh rains will continue to hit Vietnam over September 4 to 5, as Kajiki is expected to head northeast China and western Taiwan.
Bron: watchers.news
Heavy rains brought by Tropical Storms #Podul and #Kajiki have caused devastating #floods across central #Vietnam. We made this Flood Proxy Map using #sar data from #Sentinel1 (@CopernicusEU), in collaboration with the @aria_hazards team. (https://t.co/I5OahHVGmT) pic.twitter.com/aMXcTh62Mm
— ARIA-SG @ EOS (@eos_aria) September 6, 2019
Tormenta #Kajiki causa inundaciones y #deslizamientos en #Vietnam https://t.co/iPBUWSRiHn
— Alerta Roja (@alertarojanot) September 4, 2019
#Tropical #South_China_Sea #Kajiki #94W Images 03/0430UTC with 038/0001UTC GFS GEM and GEFS tracks JMA 0300UITC track cone or ECMWF 02/1200UTC ensemble tracks. pic.twitter.com/NmEzcKsLp7
— Mike Trigger (@T2mike) September 3, 2019
#Kajiki tropical depression has brought us rain accumulation of 300mm/24h in Vinh, which equals to 6 months rainfall in Finland. It is interesting to notice how life still goes on here, people move with their scooters and continue the daily duties. #heavyrain #expertmission pic.twitter.com/YagYKw275t
— Ilona Láng (@lang_ilona) September 4, 2019
##Thailand #Mukdahan Muang District. The minute the current blew away the bridge from #Kajiki Storm pic.twitter.com/r22HYXhMJa
— Rajprasong_News Analysis (@Rajprasong_News) September 4, 2019
#Thailand Weather Bureau: #Kajiki dissipates & goes back to South China Sea, rain continues in the eastern and southern #Isaan #Thailand pic.twitter.com/IEnnL5Uu9y
— Rajprasong_News Analysis (@Rajprasong_News) September 4, 2019
Urgent nation-wide warning to brace for heavy rains from storm Kajiki#Kajiki https://t.co/miF8juNqfd
— The Nation Thailand (@nationnews) September 4, 2019