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Oil leak hits Kaohsiung coastline

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-09-15
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – Oil leaking from four fishing trawlers thrown loose by Typhoon Meranti was 6773564polluting the coastline of Kaohsiung City near Xiziwan, reports said Thursday.

Earlier, one crew member who had been reported missing after being swept off one of the ships was found dead, reports said.

During Wednesday’s typhoon, the four fishing trawlers had been situated inside the fishing harbor in Kaohsiung’s Qianzhen District. Their cables broke loose because of the strong force of the wind and the vessels drifted toward Xiziwan, an area known for its bay with a beach close to National Sun Yat-sen University.

Experts from the Kaohsiung City Government, the harbor authorities and the ships’ owners went to the site to evaluate the situation, and came to the conclusion that the damage to the ships was so serious that it would be impossible to tow them away. Environmental services sent staff to put up lines around the area which would stop the oil from moving to other areas.     [FULL  STORY]

Sea warning expected for Typhoon Malakas late Thursday

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/09/15
By: Chen Wei-ting and S.C. Chang

Taipei, Sept. 15 (CNA) The Central Weather Bureau said it will issue a sea warning for Typhoon

From the Central Weather Bureau website

From the Central Weather Bureau website

Malakas late Thursday, as the storm was moving closer to Taiwan.

As of 2:00 p.m., Malakas was located 900 kilometers southeast of Taiwan, moving west northwest at a speed of 22 kilometers per hour, the bureau said.

On its current path, the storm is expected to affect northern and eastern parts of Taiwan on Saturday, the CWB said, adding that it will issue a sea warning late Thursday and land warning around noon on Friday.

Central Taiwan may also see heavy rain from Malakas, the 16th typhoon of the season, the weather bureau said.

With a radius of 120 km, the typhoon was carrying maximum sustained winds of 126 km per hour and gusts of up to 162 km per hour, the CWB said.     [SOURCE]

Tsai and Lin visit typhoon-hit south

POWER LOSSES:Pingtung County Commissioner Pan Meng-an said it might take time to restore power as more than 300 utility poles were downed in the storm

Taipei Times
Date: Sep 16, 2016
By: Staff writer, with CNA

President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) yesterday morning inspected the Central Emergency Operation Center

 Pingtung County Commissioner Pan Meng-an, third left, yesterday briefs President Tsai Ing-wen, center, as she tours Jiadong Township to inspect the damage caused by Typhoon Meranti on Wednesday. Photo: Yeh Yung-chien, Taipei Times


Pingtung County Commissioner Pan Meng-an, third left, yesterday briefs President Tsai Ing-wen, center, as she tours Jiadong Township to inspect the damage caused by Typhoon Meranti on Wednesday. Photo: Yeh Yung-chien, Taipei Times

in Taipei before traveling to storm-ravaged Pingtung County, a day after Typhoon Meranti devastated southern Taiwan, leaving one person dead and 51 injured.

After being briefed about the aftermath of the storm, Tsai thanked military personnel and government workers at the center for evacuating residents to safety, assisting in cleanup operations and helping restore water and power supplies.

She warned the public not to let their guard down as another storm, Typhoon Malakas, could affect the nation in the coming days.

In Pingtung, Tsai met with residents of Jiadong Township (佳冬), which was flooded with waist-deep water, as military personnel delivered food and other supplies to residents stranded in three of the township’s villages.

Jiadong residents appealed for help restoring power and solving the flood problem, and Tsai told them that water pumps were being sent from Kaohsiung.     [FULL  STORY]

President vows aid in Meranti’s wake

The China Post
Date: September 16, 2016
By: John Liu

TAIPEI, Taiwan — President Tsai Ing-wen paid a visit to the most severely flooded areas of Pingtung on

Navy officers help residents with a rubber boat in Jiadung Township, Pingtung County, Thursday, Sept. 15. The village was severely flooded after Severe Typhoon Meranti brought torrential rains overnight. (CNA)

Navy officers help residents with a rubber boat in Jiadung Township, Pingtung County, Thursday, Sept. 15. The village was severely flooded after Severe Typhoon Meranti brought torrential rains overnight. (CNA)

Thursday and pledged later that the government would strive to quickly restore normalcy to affected citizens.

Typhoon Meranti dumped about 800 millimeters of rainfall in a day, turning roads into small rivers.

As flooding reaching waist level in some areas, the military dispatched inflatable boats to deliver canned food, instant noodles and other supplies to stranded households.

In Pingtung, more than 600 people remain stranded in the three villages of Jiadon Township, where streets were flooded and power was offline.

Speaking with the president, a woman said her hometown flooded every year.

After meeting with the locals, Tsai asked that more plumbers be sent to the flooded regions and that Taiwan Power Company speed up repairs on the power grid.

While draining floodwaters is a relatively simple matter, restoring power poses a challenge, particularly because more than 300 utility poles had been uprooted by strong winds in Pingtung.     [FULL  STORY]

Super Typhoon Meranti Batters Southern Taiwan

With gusts of 227 kph, Meranti is the strongest typhoon to make landfall in Taiwan in 21 years.

The News Lens
Date: 2016/09/14
By: TNL Staff

More than 550,000 households in Taiwan were without electricity on Wednesday as Super Typhoon

Photo Credit:爆料公社

Photo Credit:爆料公社

Meranti crossed the Bashi Channel and grazed the southernmost parts of the country, bringing powerful winds and torrential rain.

With gusts of more than 227 kph — the strongest ever recorded by the Hengchun meteorological station since it was set up in 1896 — Meranti is the strongest typhoon to make landfall in Taiwan since 1995, the Central Weather Bureau said. The Category 5 Meranti is also the world’s strongest storm this year.

As of 3 pm, total rainfall accumulations had reached 707 mm in Pingtung’s West Dawu (西大武山), 436 mm in Hualien’s Tienhsiang (天祥), 369 mm in Taitung’s Shangli (上里) and 304 mm at Yilan’s Taipingshan (太平山).

About 1,000 people in mountainous areas in southern parts of the country have been evacuated, primarily in Kaohsiung’s Taoyuan District and Chiayi’s Meishan District.     [FULL STORY]

Pubic urged to stop barbecuing during Mid-Autumn Festival

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-09-14
By: Wendy Lee, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

Three local environmental groups have initiated online petition against the holding of barbecues during 6773541the Mid-Autumn Festival, as doing so creates large amounts of trash every year and contributes to serious air pollution, one of the environmental group Zero Waste Taiwan said Wednesday.

Outdoor barbecuing is part of the celebrations of Mid-Autumn Festival that is uniquely seen in Taiwan. However, it also inevitably generates large amounts of waste and air pollution that is harmful to the environment.

The use of disposable products such as barbeque grills and plastic tableware every year during the Mid-Autumn Festival celebrations has led to a marked increase in trash, and has become a major cause of environmental problems, Zero Waste Taiwan said.

The petition is thus a push against the holding of barbecues during the national holiday, in hopes of raising awareness of the importance of protecting the environment by reducing waste and air pollution, the environmental group added.     [SOURCE]

Malakas strengthens into typhoon, to approach Taiwan Saturday: CWB

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/09/14
By: Chen Wei-ting and Evelyn Kao

Taipei, Sept. 14 (CNA) Tropical Storm Malakas has strengthened into a typhoon and is expected to

Potential path of Typhoon Malakas. (From the Central Weather Bureau website)

Potential path of Typhoon Malakas. (From the Central Weather Bureau website)

come closest to Taiwan on Saturday, the Central Weather Bureau (CWB) said Wednesday.

As of 2 p.m. on Wednesday, the storm was located 1,380 kilometers southeast of Taiwan’s southernmost point of Eluanpi (鵝鑾鼻) and was moving in a northwesterly direction toward Taiwan at 22 kilometers per hour, the bureau said.

The typhoon was carrying maximum sustained winds of 126 kph, with gusts of up to 162 kph, according to CWB data.

A sea warning for Malakas could be issued late Thursday or Friday, and it could affect northern and eastern Taiwan when it comes closest to the country on Saturday, the bureau said.

Malakas is expected to then move northward toward Japan, it said.     [SOURCE]

Meranti blows through, injures nine

NOT OVER YET:Hengchun Township had winds that reached Level 16 in the Beaufort Scale, a new record. Another typhoon could move near Taiwan on Saturday

Taipei Times
Date: Sep 15, 2016
By: Shelley Shan / Staff reporter

Strong winds and torrential rainfall yesterday pummeled southern and eastern Taiwan, injuring nine

A motorcylist holds on to a lightpole as she braves the high winds and rain of Typhoon Meranti in Kaohsiung yesterday. Photo: Ritchie B. Tongo, EPA

A motorcylist holds on to a lightpole as she braves the high winds and rain of Typhoon Meranti in Kaohsiung yesterday. Photo: Ritchie B. Tongo, EPA

people and leaving more than 550,000 households without power.

Data from the Central Emergency Operation Center showed that three people were hurt in Taitung County, one in Hualien County, three in Tainan and two in Kinmen. Five were injured as they rode motorcycles or traveled in cars.

Taiwan Power Co (台電) statistics showed that 702,946 households lost power, the majority in Pingtung County. However, power had been restored to about 130,000 homes by about 3:40pm, it said.

By 8:30pm yesterday, the center of Meranti was 70km southwest of Penghu and it had become a weaker typhoon, the Central Weather Bureau said.     [FULL  STORY]

Meranti rolls in as Malakas veers close

The China Post
Date: September 15, 2016
By: Sun Hsin Hsuan

TAIPEI, Taiwan — As Typhoon Meranti roared through southern Taiwan, Typhoon Malakas veered

A hotel's sign board lies across a road in Kaohsiung, Wednesday, Sept. 14, after it was uprooted by strong winds brought by Typhoon Meranti. (CNA)

A hotel’s sign board lies across a road in Kaohsiung, Wednesday, Sept. 14, after it was uprooted by strong winds brought by Typhoon Meranti. (CNA)

toward the northeast coast.

Forecasts suggest Malakas will make landfall by Saturday.

More than 500,000 households suffered power cuts Wednesday, with Pingtung County and Orchid Island the worst affected, according to the Central Emergency Operation Center.

State-owned electricity supplier Taipower said the company was making emergency repairs around the nation.

As of 1:00 p.m. on Wednesday, almost 20,000 households were still without access to water, with the Taiwan Water Corporation saying it had managed to restore the water supply to 50 households by the evening, but admitted more work remained to be done.

While several people were reported injured in Hualien, Taitung, and Kinmen County, no fatalities from the extreme weather had so far been reported.     [FULL  STORY]

Taiwan County Leaders Seek to Travel to Beijing Amid Cross-Strait Tourism Spat

A group of Taiwanese county leaders are breaking with the government line on cross-Strait relations and plan to travel to Beijing to woo Chinese tourists.

The News Lens
Date: 2016/09/13
By: Hsu Chia-yu

A group of county leaders from Taiwan plans to meet officials from the Taiwan Affairs Office (TAO) in

Photo Credit: AP/ 達志影像

Photo Credit: AP/ 達志影像

Beijing on Sept. 16 to invite Chinese tourists to visit “counties which recognize the ‘1992 consensus’” in Taiwan.

It has been reported that in the period from May 20, when President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) took office, to Aug. 16, the number of Chinese tourists visiting Taiwan decreased by 40 percent from 350,000 to 220,500, compared with the same period last year. The exact reasons for the drop in Chinese tourists have yet to be determined; other destinations for Chinese tourists, such as Hong Kong and Macau, have also experienced drops in Chinese arrivals this year.

About 10,000 people took to the streets in Taipei on Sept. 12, calling for government action to help the tourism industry. Although the Executive Yuan on Sept. 8 said it would offer loans totaling NT$30 billion (US$940 million) to the industry, some tour operators said the government’s action would not meet the industry’s urgent needs.     [FULL  STORY]