Tuesday, October 22, 2019

More flooding rain ahead for storm-weary Japan as country continues to recover from Hagibis, Neoguri

Updated Oct. 22, 2019 9:43 AM




In the wake of several tropical systems that brought flooding to Japan, including Typhoon Hagibis that caused over 70 deaths, another round of flooding rain is expected later this week.
While direct impacts from Typhoon Bualoi are expected to pass far enough offshore that the storm will not be a threat to mainland Japan, a second area of low pressure will strengthen near southern Japan and spread heavy rain over much of the country.
Typhoon Bauloi as seen from the Himawari 8 satellite on Tuesday afternoon, local time. (Image/CIRA RAAMB)
Bualoi developed several hundred miles to the southeast of Guam over the past weekend before it strengthened into a typhoon on Monday morning, local time.
Rain will develop on Wednesday across Kyushu. The rest of the country is expected to have a much needed day of dry weather for the midweek.
Dry weather, however, will be short lived across much of Japan as the rain across Kyushu will expand in coverage and intensity as it moves northward through the second half of the week.
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The greatest threat for flooding rainfall will expand from Kyushu on Wednesday and Wednesday night into Shikoku and southern and eastern Honshu Thursday into Friday.
AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Dave Houk said that the hardest-hit areas can receive 100-200 mm (4-8 inches) of rain including an AccuWeather Local StormMax™ of 250 mm (10 inches).
Many of these areas have already been inundated with heavy rain so far this month. As a result, rainfall of this magnitude can more easily trigger flooding and mudslides.
Outside of the areas with the greatest flood threat, 25-100 mm (1-4 inches) of rain will fall that can lead to an isolated flood threat.
Even in the event that flooding does not unfold in any given location, heavy rain will likely lead to travel delays and can slow recovery in areas recently overwhelmed by flooding.
Towns in southern and eastern Honshu have been hit particularly hard this month. Tokyo has received 412 mm (16.23 inches) of rain so far during October, which is nearly double the city's normal monthly rainfall.
Bualoi is seen spinning past the Northern Mariana Islands on Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2019. (Image/CIRA RAAMB)
Other locations in southern Honshu have had even greater rainfall during October. Owase has received just over 1,000 mm (40 inches) of rain. Of that, 523 mm (20.6 inches) fell in just one day.
While heavy rain will continue to batter the country this week, some good news may be on the horizon for flood-weary residents.
"In the wake of this round of potentially flooding rainfall, there appears to be a break in widespread heavy rain into the end of the month," Houk said.

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