While a prolonged and deadly heat wave impacts Japan further south, major typhoon Soudelor slams Taiwan and China producing 145 mph wind gusts in Japan’s Ryukyu Islands and dumps over 50 inches of rain in Taiwan.
6 Straight Days Above 35C

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Tokyo Heat Wave Lasted Eight Days, Doubling All-Time Record; 55 Confirmed Dead in Japan
Meteorologist Bonnie Schneider talks about the intense and dangerous heat in Japan that has killed at least fourteen, and hospitalized more than three thousand. <!—->
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A heat wave that has already killed dozens and sickened thousands in Japan reached another torrid milestone Friday as the nation’s capital, Tokyo, suffered an unprecedented eighth consecutive day of extreme heat.
Tokyo reached 37.7 degrees Celsius (99.9 degrees Fahrenheit) Friday, marking its eighth straight day of highs at or above Japan’s “extreme heat” threshold of 35 C (95 F). An analysis of Japan Meteorological Agency data, conducted by The Weather Channel, confirmed that the previous record was just four consecutive days sent on five different occasions between 1978 and 2013. Records began in central Tokyo in June 1875.
The torrid late-morning reading also marked central Tokyo’s highest reported temperature since August 2013. The city’s all-time record high remains 39.5 C (103.1 F) set July 20, 2004.
The toll from Japan’s ongoing heat wave accelerated last week, boosting the year’s official tally to 55 heat-related deaths and sending more than 11,000 to the hospital according to new government figures released Tuesday.
According to Japan’s Fire and Disaster Management Agency, 25 people died from heat stroke and other heat-related illnesses nationwide during the week of July 27 through Aug. 2. It was by far the deadliest week so far this year in Japan, nearly equaling the death toll of 30 in the preceding three months combined.
Public broadcaster NHK said another 5 heat deaths were confirmed Wednesday in Japan, in addition to 7 unconfirmed heat deaths.
The toll seems likely to rise even further as more deaths are officially attributed to the heat. NHK, citing local authorities, said heat-related illnesses are suspected of causing 68 deaths in Tokyo alone between July 11 and Aug. 4. The official national count of 55 only includes two deaths in Tokyo through Aug. 2.
The number of people sent to hospitals for heat-related illnesses also skyrocketed, reaching 11,637 when excluding the 25 deaths. This was more than double the figure for the same period in 2014. Since April 27, more than 35,000 people have been hospitalized due to hot weather in Japan. Of those, 855 have required at least three weeks of hospitalization due to the severity of their illness.
The heat has spared no region of the country. Heat-related deaths have been reported in 29 of Japan’s 47 prefectures, and each of the 47 prefectures has reported at least 100 heat-related illnesses.
(MORE: Feels-Like Temperature Hits 164 in Iran)
And the Heat Goes On
The greatest concentration, however, has been in the nation’s urbanized areas – in part due to weather and in part simply due to larger populations. The Greater Tokyo area accounts for 19 of the 55 heat deaths this year, with Saitama prefecture suffering the highest death toll (nine) of any single prefecture. Tokyo proper leads the casualty count with 3,037 people affected by the heat, including two deaths.
Japan’s aging population is particularly vulnerable to the heat. Just over 49 percent of this year’s illnesses have involved people at least 65 years old. Children account for about 15 percent of the total, with adults ages 18 to 65 constituting the rest of the total.
The heat has expanded in recent days. According to data from the Japan Meteorological Agency, 223 of the nation’s 928 temperature observation sites recorded a high of at least 35 degrees Celsius (95 degrees Fahrenheit) on Saturday (Aug. 1), and more than two-thirds of the observation network hit at least 30 C (86 F).
Aided by abundant sunshine and a dearth of thunderstorm activity, more than 81 percent of JMA’s observation network hit the 30 C mark Tuesday, the highest figure since Aug. 22, 2012. The heat spread even further Wednesday, when 822 out of 928 sites reached 30 C, a level not matched since Aug. 6, 2010.
The heat even spread to the normally cool shores of Hokkaido, the northernmost of Japan’s four main Islands. The city of Nemuro reached an all-time record high of 33.6 C (92.5 F) Wednesday, topping the previous record of 33.0 C (91.4 F) set Aug. 6, 1960. Records in Nemuro date all the way back to 1879, making this an especially significant record climatologically.
Arguably the epicenter of the heat has been in the northern suburbs of Tokyo, which are among the hottest regions of the country owing to their low elevation, long distance from the coast and southerly latitude – a rare combination in Japan.
The city of Tatebayashi in Gunma prefecture recorded its 13th consecutive day of temperatures 35 C or higher on Wednesday, reaching 39.8 C (103.6 F). That’s the highest temperature recorded anywhere in Japan this year, according to JMA, and ties for the 25th-highest daily high temperature ever recorded in Japanese history.
In Japan, a day with temperatures reaching or exceeding 35 C (95 F) is known as a mōshobi, written as 猛暑日 and meaning “extremely hot day.” It’s likely no coincidence that the first character of that term is also the first character of Japan’s highest category of typhoon – mōretsu, written as 猛烈 and meaning “violent.”
The latter term was applied to Super Typhoon Soudelor when it peaked in intensity Monday. The typhoon impacted Japan’s southernmost islands on Friday, but was too far south to bring any heat relief to the mainland.
145 mph Winds, Over 50 Inches Of Rain
Typhoon Soudelor produces damaging wind, flooding rain to Taiwan and China but well as that, Hong Kong sets a new all-time record high today due to enhanced subsidence from Soudelor.

Credit: weather.com

Credit: weather.com
Highlights:
- Soudelor weakened to a tropical storm over China at 4:00 a.m. Sunday local time (4:00 p.m. EDT Saturday). The Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) has issued its final advisory on Soudelor.
- The main threat from Soudelor through Sunday will be additional locally heavy rain over China and parts of Taiwan.
- Typhoon Soudelor made its first landfall in northeast Taiwan at 5:00 a.m. Saturday local time (5:00 p.m. EDT Friday) about 19 miles northwest of Hualien with estimated top sustained winds of 120 mph. This is equivalent to Category 3 on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale.
- Soudelor then made a second landfall at 10:10 p.m. local time Saturday with maximum sustained winds of 85 mph in Xiuyu District, Putian City in Fujian Province in southeast China.
- Winds gusted over 100 mph in Taiwan and more than 50 inches of rain has fallen in at least one location.
- Soudelor impacted Japan’s far southwest Ryukyu Islands Friday into Saturday, where sustained winds of 101 mph with a gust to 145 mph was confirmed in at least one location.
- Soudelor also caused widespread damage in Saipan late last Sunday into Monday.
- After pounding Saipan, Soudelor underwent rapid intensification Monday and became Super Typhoon Soudelor, the strongest tropical cyclone on Earth so far in 2015.
(MORE: Latest News From Taiwan)
Soudelor Status and Forecast

Current Winds and Satellite
Soudelor weakened to a tropical storm over eastern China as of 4:00 a.m. Sunday local time (4:00 p.m. EDT Saturday), according to the Joint Typhoon Warning Center.
Even though Soudelor is inland and has weakened, locally heavy rain will continue over China, which could result in flooding. Gusty winds are also still expected. Bands of locally heavy rain will also continue to impact parts of Taiwan into Sunday.
Soudelor Landfalls
Soudelor made its first landfall at 5 a.m. Saturday local time in northeast Taiwan. At the time of landfall, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) bulletin said Typhoon Soudelor was a Category 3 equivalent with maximum sustained winds of 120 mph (one-minute average).
The second landfall occurred at 10:10 p.m. local time Saturday with maximum sustained winds of 85 mph in Xiuyu District, Putian City in Fujian Province in southeast China.
(MORE: What is the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale?)
Taiwan Impacts
Peak Wind Gusts So Far
Rainfall Totals So Far
Taoyuan International Airport west of the capital of Taipei saw measured wind gusts over 90 mph early Saturday morning. The top wind gust in Taiwan was 143 mph (64 m/s) in Su-ao, which is located along the northeast coast. However, the Central Weather Bureau deleted all wind data for this site, so the accuracy may be in question. The Taiwanese island of Pengjiayu, which is located just to the northeast of Taiwan’s main island, saw sustained winds up to 93 mph and a gust up to 131 mph.
More than 4 million power customers lost power at some point in Taiwan, according to taipower.com which is the most power outages on record in Taiwan due to a typhoon.
Torrential rainfall also impacted northern Taiwan. One of CWB’s weather stations in Datong Township, Yilan County, reported 52.52 inches of rain.
For more on the impacts in Taiwan, click here.
China Impacts
Rainfall Forecast
The yellow, orange, red and pink shadings correspond to the forecast heaviest rainfall amounts.
Typhoon Soudelor made landfall at 10:10 p.m. local time Saturday with maximum sustained winds of 85 mph in Xiuyu District, Putian City in Fujian Province in southeast China.
Locally heavy rain will continue to impact parts of eastern China through Sunday.
The coastal city of Fuzhou saw tropical-storm force winds well ahead of Soudelor’s arrival. A peak wind gust to 83 mph and more than nine inches of rain has been reported there.
The strongest reported wind gust in eastern China was 89 mph in Jiuxian Shan.
Japan’s Ryukyu Islands Impacts (Okinawa, Miyako and Yaeyama)
The center of Soudelor passed well south of the main island of Okinawa (including Kadena Air Base). A gust to 52 mph was reported at Kadena Air Base early Friday afternoon.
The eye passed just south of Japan’s southwesternmost islands, which lie just east of Taiwan. Typhoon-force gusts (exceeding 74 mph, or 33 meters per second) were observed at several locations there, including a sustained wind of 101 mph (45.1 m/s) and a gust to 145 mph (64.7 m/s) at Yonaguni-Jima at 3:20 a.m. Saturday Japanese time. A peak gust of 123 mph (55 m/s) was clocked on the island of Ishigakijima at 11:51 p.m. Japanese time Friday (10:51 a.m. EDT in the U.S.).
Saipan Impacts
Intensifying from a Category 1 to Category 2 equivalent storm, Soudelor’s eye passed directly over the island of Saipan, home to about 48,000 residents. Saipan is part of the Northern Mariana Islands, a U.S. commonwealth.
A state of disaster and significant emergency was declared by Acting Gov. Ralph DLG Torres.
High winds downed power poles, removed roofs off buildings and flooded Saipan’s power plant. About 500 people were in emergency shelters, as of Thursday morning, the Red Cross told the Associated Press.
“From looking at the damage, I would guess weeks to months to restore power. It took about three to six months to restore service on Guam after Pongsona,” Dr. Phillip Dauterman told the Pacific Daily News in an email. “This is not the total damage of Pongsona, but it is close.”
Saipan residents rationed gasoline, and Guam sent ten generators to power water pumps, the AP reported. Damage is said to be widespread around the island, and power may not be restored for up to two months.
“I haven’t seen a storm like this in 20 years,” Gregorio Kilili Camcacho Sablan, Northern Mariana Islands’ delegate to the United States congress, told the AP. “Unfortunately, the resources we have are hardly enough to get things up.”
Saipan International Airport recorded a peak wind gust to 91 mph just before 11 p.m. local time last Sunday night, as the western eyewall approached, before wind observations dropped off — not to mention the instrumentation erroneously reported snow — for about an hour.
Soudelor passed north of Guam but wind gusts over 30 mph and light rain were measured.
Philippines Impacts:
Rainbands on the southern edge of Soudelor’s circulation have triggered deadly flooding in parts of the Philippines, and this threat may persist into the weekend.
Strongest of 2015, So Far
Soudelor intensified rapidly over the western Pacific Ocean after raking through Saipan, a U.S. commonwealth in the northern Mariana Islands.
Soudelor became the fifth super typhoon of this year Monday after undergoing a replacement of its eyewall, a process which occurs in all intense tropical cyclones. A super typhoon is defined by sustained one-minute wind speeds of at least 150 mph.
At its peak Monday afternoon (mainland U.S. time), Soudelor was estimated by the U.S. military’s Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) to pack maximum one-minute sustained winds of 180 mph and gusts to 220 mph.

Soudelor in incredible detail when it was a super typhoon August 3, 2015 at 12:33 p.m. EDT. This image is from the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) sensor aboard NASA’s Suomi NPP satellite. Soudelor’s maximum sustained winds topped out at 180 mph. (NOAA/NASA RAMMB/CIRA )
(MORE: Spectacular Images of Soudelor)
The Japan Meteorological Agency estimated Soudelor’s central pressure at 8 a.m. EDT Tuesday was 900 millibars, making Soudelor the strongest tropical cyclone on Earth so far in 2015. That central pressure has come up quite a bit, reflecting Soudelor’s weakening, to an estimated 945 millibars.
According to the Digital Typhoon database, Super Typhoon Maysak was the year’s previous strongest typhoon, bottoming out at an estimated 910 millibars. South Pacific Cyclone Pam in March reached peak estimated sustained winds of about 165 mph (145 knots) in the South Pacific basin.
Low wind shear and very warm sea surface temperatures allowed Soudelor to ramp up quickly; the cyclone was just a minimal typhoon 48 hours before reaching its peak intensity
Hong Kong Sets New All-Time Record

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