Guangdong may see more rainstorms and fickle
weather conditions brought by intertwining typhoons Saomai and
Bopha, which are presently separated by a mere 1,000 km,
meteorologists said yesterday.
While Fujian Province, Guangdong's eastern neighbor,
is more directly exposed to attacks from the twin typhoons, heavy
rains brought by them may deal a new blow to Guangdong, which is
still reeling from the destruction caused by previous typhoons like
Bilis and Prapiroon.
Fujian meteorologists said Saomai and Bopha, which are moving on
the western Pacific, will influence each other and vary their paths
frequently. They may affect the coastal areas of Fujian and
Guangdong from today.
Guangdong meteorologists also warned that high tides may strike
the coastal areas of the province around Thursday. If storms and
high tides come together, it could be catastrophic for coastal
regions.
Bopha, the ninth tropical storm this year, was expected to make
landfall in northern Taiwan last night or this morning as a
relatively weak category-one typhoon.
Saomai, which means the planet of Venus in Vietnamese, was also
moving towards Taiwan from the southeast, with a maximum sustained
wind speed of 119 kilometers per hour and gusts of up to 155
kilometers per hour, Taiwan's weather bureau said yesterday.
As Bopha, which means "flower" in Khmer, and Saomai are
approaching, Guangdong meteorologists said the eastern parts of the
province should expect rain from Thursday to Saturday.
Typhoon Prapiroon, which made landfall in Guangdong last week,
killed at least 80 in China, including 42 in Guangdong.
The worst typhoon to hit China this season was Bilis, which
struck July 14 and hovered over southern China for 10 days, killing
at least 612 people.
(Shenzhen Daily August 9, 2006)