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Flood Disasters Due to Recent Abnormal Rainfall and Preventive Measures in Japan

Author(s): H. Oshikawa; A. Hashimoto; K. Tsukahara; T. Komatsu

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Abstract: This paper examines flood disasters caused by climate change focusing on floods occurring on Japan's southwest island of Kyushu during record precipitation exceeding 1,000 mm. Changes in natural weather and other patterns, e.g., heavy rainfalls 1,900 mm recorded in the Miyazaki Prefecture during Typhoon 14 in 2005and 1,200 mm in the Kagoshima Prefecture Sendai River basin in five days of torrential rain in 2006, have made it clear that conventional measures for coping with such occurrences are no longer adequate. Just 300 mm of precipitation during Typhoon 10 in 2003, for example, triggered catastrophic results in Hokkaido[Hasegawa et al. (2005) ], where heavy rainfall rarely occurred and there was non immunity against 300 mm rainfall. Since global warming and its attendant influences are expected to continue and to bring condition of non immunity against an increased potential of disaster to whole country, the need for better knowledge and new ideas on disaster prevention are urgently required.

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Year: 2009

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